title,url,timestamp,content,source,clean_date,clean_content,arti_score,pos_sent,neg_sent,rnn_arti_score,rnn_pos_sent,rnn_neg_sent,date_extracted Opinion: The drama around Sam Altman is an urgent warning,https://edition.cnn.com/2023/11/21/opinions/sam-altman-openai-ouster-danger-filipovic/index.html," Published 9:50 AM EST, Tue November 21, 2023 ","The biggest tech news this week is the ouster of Sam Altman from his role as CEO of OpenAI, a move that has shaken the company and the industry. Hundreds of OpenAI employees have threatened to resign. Altman has already moved on to a role at Microsoft. And OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is on its third CEO in as many days. It’s all very juicy. But this drama should also be raising larger questions, far beyond one company’s internal hirings and firings, including: Who are the people making the decisions that will determine so much of our technological future? What guiding principles are they using to make those decisions? And how should other institutions – governments, non-tech industries, global alliances, regulatory bodies – reign in the worst excesses of potentially dangerous AI innovators? OpenAI was founded as a nonprofit, with an explicit mission to harness what may soon be superhuman intelligence “to benefit humanity as a whole.” But that sensibility hasn’t lasted. The company now has a multi-billion-dollar for-profit arm. They have been developing new technologies at lightning speed, and sometimes sending them out to the public before some employees believed they were ready. The company has already reportedly invented an AI technology so dangerous they will never release it – but they also won’t tell reporters or the public exactly what it is. This dynamic – a potentially dangerous technology developed at extreme speed, largely behind closed doors – is partly to blame for Altman’s firing. The OpenAI board, according to CNN’s David Goldman, worried that “the company was making the technological equivalent of a nuclear bomb, and its caretaker, Sam Altman, was moving so fast that he risked a global catastrophe.” At particular issue seemed to be Altman’s efforts to make the tools behind ChatGPT available to anyone who wanted to make their own version of the chatbot. This could be widely disastrous, some board members worried. But then they fired him without warning, and apparently without involving Microsoft, the company’s largest shareholder. Now, Altman is at the new AI group at Microsoft, and one has to wonder if the oversight and caution there will be on par with that at OpenAI, or if he’ll be handed carte blanche to push as fast and hard as he wants. And for all the justified reticence of the OpenAI board, the company has carried out much of its work in secrecy – without the public really understanding what a handful of unaccountable technologists are building, and how it is nearly guaranteed to indelibly change their lives. AI is broadly understood to have the potential to reshape vast swaths of human existence. At the very least, it seems nearly guaranteed to change how we process information, how we communicate, how we learn and how we work (and if we work). And the ramifications could be much more extreme. AI technologies have already demonstrated the ability to lie and to cover their tracks. They have already been able to suggest the design to make a virus spread more quickly. Many researchers acutely understand just how quickly these machines could develop the capacity to annihilate us, including Altman: He has a prepper’s paradise prepared in Big Sur, complete with guns and “gas masks from the Israeli Defense Force” in case AI goes off the rails and the robots go to war against humans, according to reporting in the New Yorker. But don’t worry, he told an Atlantic reporter: If AI is determined to wipe us out, “no gas mask is helping anyone.” (If you want an excellent and terrifying rundown of AI’s risks – at least those we understand right now, which are almost certainly a mere sliver of the looming perils – the Atlantic profile of Altman and his technology is worth a read). AI is very exciting technology. But it is also a potentially very dangerous one, and not in the social media sense of “it may give us bad self-esteem and make us lonelier” but in the sense of “it could break down human societies and kill us all.” Given the life-altering potential of AI – that even if it doesn’t kill us all, it will almost certainly change human existence in unprecedented ways at unprecedented speed – we all have a stake in how it’s being developed. And yet the development is being left to a handful of people (who seem to be largely men) in Silicon Valley, and other tech pockets around the globe. And we all have a stake in whose interests AI will serve – and right now, its development is being funded with billions of dollars by people expecting to make a huge profit. Do the interests of the public align with the interests of the shareholders to whom profit-driven, potentially tremendously lucrative-for-a-few companies are beholden? Or with the interests of tech entrepreneurs who are primarily excited about being at the forefront of the AI revolution, regardless of the potential human costs? One thing is clear: AI is coming. And how it is built and unleashed on the public matters more than perhaps any technology of the past century. It is, indeed, up there with the atom bomb in its destructive potential – except likely more difficult to regulate and control. “Regulation” does not begin to scratch the surface of what’s needed to make sure that the AI future is not a catastrophic one, especially since the development of AI is now a massive international arms race, with particularly horrific implications if bad actors develop this technology first. But regulation is, at minimum, a necessary step. So is transparency: In the US, companies have wide leverage to work behind a veil of secrecy, and much of what AI companies do is kept secret to stymy competition. But the public certainly has a right to understand what life-altering technologies are set to be inflicted upon us, and what the creators are doing to protect humanity – our jobs, our communities, our families, our connections, our educations and our abilities to build a life of purpose, but also our lives and our safety. The Altman story is fascinating because Altman is the most powerful figure in AI technology, which in effect makes him one of the most powerful men in the world. But that should give us pause: Who is he, what power does he hold, what is he doing with it, who does he answer to, and are we comfortable with this much life-altering potential being held by a few unaccountable people?",CNN,21/11/2023,"['The biggest tech news this week is theousterof Sam Altman from his role as CEO of OpenAI, a move that has shaken the company and the industry.', 'Hundreds of OpenAI employees have threatened toresign.', 'Altman has alreadymoved onto a role at Microsoft.', 'And OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is on itsthird CEOin as many days.', 'It’s all very juicy.', 'But this drama should also be raising larger questions, far beyond one company’s internal hirings and firings, including: Who are the people making the decisionsthat will determine so much of our technological future?', 'What guiding principles are they using to make those decisions?', 'And how should other institutions – governments, non-tech industries, global alliances, regulatory bodies – reign in the worst excesses of potentially dangerous AI innovators?', 'OpenAI was founded as a nonprofit, with an explicit mission to harness what may soon be superhuman intelligence “to benefit humanity as a whole.”', 'But that sensibility hasn’t lasted.', 'The company now has a multi-billion-dollar for-profit arm.', 'They have been developing new technologies at lightning speed, and sometimes sending them out to the publicbefore some employees believed they were ready.', 'The company has already reportedly invented an AI technology so dangerous they will never release it – but they alsowon’t tellreporters or the public exactly what it is.', 'This dynamic – a potentially dangerous technology developed at extreme speed, largely behind closed doors – is partly to blame for Altman’s firing.', 'The OpenAI board, according toCNN’s David Goldman, worried that “the company was making the technological equivalent of a nuclear bomb, and its caretaker, Sam Altman, was moving so fast that he risked a global catastrophe.”', 'At particular issue seemed to be Altman’s efforts to make the tools behind ChatGPT available to anyone who wanted to make their own version of the chatbot.', 'This could be widely disastrous, some board members worried.', 'But then they fired him without warning, and apparently without involving Microsoft, the company’s largest shareholder.', 'Now, Altman is at the new AI group at Microsoft, and one has to wonder if the oversight and caution there will be on par with that at OpenAI, or if he’ll be handed carte blanche to push as fast and hard as he wants.', 'And for all the justified reticence of the OpenAI board, the company has carried out much of its work in secrecy – without the public really understanding what a handful of unaccountable technologists are building, and how it is nearly guaranteed to indelibly change their lives.', 'AI is broadly understood to have the potential to reshape vast swaths of human existence.', 'At the very least, it seems nearly guaranteed to change how we process information, how we communicate, how we learn and how we work (and if we work).', 'And the ramifications could be much more extreme.', 'AI technologies have already demonstrated the abilityto lie and to cover their tracks.', 'They have already been able tosuggest the designto make a virus spread more quickly.', 'Many researchersacutely understandjust how quickly these machines could develop the capacity to annihilate us, including Altman: He has a prepper’s paradise prepared in Big Sur, complete with guns and “gas masks from the Israeli Defense Force” in case AI goes off the rails and the robots go to war against humans,according to reporting in the New Yorker.', 'But don’t worry, he told an Atlantic reporter: If AI is determined to wipe us out, “no gas mask is helping anyone.” (', 'If you want an excellent and terrifying rundown of AI’s risks – at least those we understand right now, which are almost certainly a mere sliver of the looming perils –the Atlantic profile of Altman and his technologyis worth a read).', 'AI is very exciting technology.', 'But it is also a potentially very dangerous one, and not in the social media sense of “it may give us bad self-esteem and make us lonelier” but in the sense of “it could break down human societies and kill us all.”', 'Given the life-altering potential of AI – that even if it doesn’t kill us all, it will almost certainly change human existence in unprecedented ways at unprecedented speed – we all have a stake in how it’s being developed.', 'And yet the development is being left to a handful of people (who seem to belargelymen) in Silicon Valley, and other tech pockets around the globe.', 'And we all have a stake in whose interests AI will serve – and right now, its development is being funded with billions of dollars by people expecting to make a huge profit.', 'Do the interests of the public align with the interests of the shareholders to whom profit-driven, potentially tremendously lucrative-for-a-few companies are beholden?', 'Or with the interests of tech entrepreneurs who are primarily excited about being at the forefront of the AI revolution, regardless of the potential human costs?', 'One thing is clear: AI is coming.', 'And how it is built and unleashed on the public matters more than perhaps any technology of the past century.', 'It is, indeed, up there with the atom bomb in its destructive potential – except likely more difficult to regulate and control.', '“Regulation” does not begin to scratch the surface of what’s needed to make sure that the AI future is not a catastrophic one, especially since the development of AI is now a massive international arms race, with particularly horrific implications if bad actors develop this technology first.', 'But regulation is, at minimum, a necessary step.', 'So is transparency: In the US, companies have wide leverage to work behind a veil of secrecy, and much of what AI companies do is kept secret to stymy competition.', 'But the public certainly has a right to understand what life-altering technologies are set to be inflicted upon us, and what the creators are doing to protect humanity – our jobs, our communities, our families, our connections, our educations and our abilities to build a life of purpose, but also our lives and our safety.', 'The Altman story is fascinating because Altman is the most powerful figure in AI technology, which in effect makes him one of the most powerful men in the world.', 'But that should give us pause: Who is he, what power does he hold, what is he doing with it, who does he answer to, and are we comfortable with this much life-altering potential being held by a few unaccountable people?']",0.0034737194649936,"But the public certainly has a right to understand what life-altering technologies are set to be inflicted upon us, and what the creators are doing to protect humanity – our jobs, our communities, our families, our connections, our educations and our abilities to build a life of purpose, but also our lives and our safety.","But it is also a potentially very dangerous one, and not in the social media sense of “it may give us bad self-esteem and make us lonelier” but in the sense of “it could break down human societies and kill us all.”",-0.2999433577060699,AI technologies have already demonstrated the abilityto lie and to cover their tracks.,"But it is also a potentially very dangerous one, and not in the social media sense of “it may give us bad self-esteem and make us lonelier” but in the sense of “it could break down human societies and kill us all.”",2024-05-21 "Walmart surges to all-time high as earnings beat on high-income shopper, e-commerce gains",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/walmart-wmt-q1-2025-earnings-.html,2024-05-16T20:04:51+0000,"In this articleWalmart on Thursday topped quarterly earnings and revenue expectations, as the discounter made significant e-commerce gains, drove profits with newer businesses like advertising and won over more high-income shoppers.The big-box retailer said it now expects to hit the high end or slightly top its previous full-year guidance. Walmart had expected net sales growth of 3% to 4% and adjusted earnings per share of between $2.23 and $2.37.Shares of the company hit an all-time high Thursday and closed about 7% higher.In an interview with CNBC, Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey said one of the factors boosting Walmart's grocery business is the widening gap between the price of cooking at home and buying food at fast-food chains or restaurants.Plus, he added, shoppers appreciate the convenience that Walmart offers. For the first time, its delivery business surpassed its store pickup in terms of volume, Rainey said.""We've got customers that are coming to us more frequently than they have before and newer customers that we haven't traditionally had, and they're coming into a Walmart whether it's a virtual store online, or whether it's one of our physical stores,"" Rainey said.Here's what the discounter reported for the fiscal first quarter compared with what Wall Street expected, according to a survey of analysts by LSEG:Walmart's net income jumped to $5.10 billion, or 63 cents per share, in the three-month period that ended April 30, compared with $1.67 billion, or 21 cents per share, in the year-ago period.Revenue climbed 6% from $152.30 billion in the year-ago quarter. That increase includes a benefit of roughly 1% from an additional selling day in the period. As the nation's largest retailer and private employer, Walmart is often viewed as a bellwether for the U.S. economy. Yet it has generally fared better during an inflationary period than other retailers because it sells staples like groceries and has a value-oriented reputation.Same-store sales for Walmart U.S. climbed by 3.8%, excluding fuel. The industry metric includes sales from stores and clubs open for at least a year. At Sam's Club, same-store sales rose 4.4% year over year, excluding fuel.E-commerce sales shot up by 22% year over year for Walmart U.S., fueled by store pickup and delivery of online orders, as well as the company's growing third-party marketplace. Walmart's customers in the U.S. made more visits to its stores and website in the quarter, but spent roughly the same as in the year-ago period. Transactions rose 3.8% and average ticket was flat compared with the year-ago quarter.This week brought promising news for Walmart and other retailers: Inflation eased in April, according to the Labor Department data released Wednesday. The consumer price index was up 3.4% year over year. The closely watched number tracks how much goods and services cost at the cash register.Walmart saw some signs of easing, too. On the company's earnings call, CEO Doug McMillon said inflation in the U.S. was only up 0.4% for the quarter, with mid-single digit deflation on general merchandise and low-single digit inflation in food.He said the company has increased ""rollbacks,"" price reductions on specific items that it typically advertises on its website or with signs in its stores.Even so, the discounter has noticed the impact of inflation, as its shoppers have been selective with purchases. Rainey said customers' ""wallets are still stretched."" He said shoppers have bought less general merchandise, such as home goods and electronics, as they prioritize spending on food and health-related items, a trend that the company has seen for the past several quarters.Still, ""even the low-income consumer seems to be holding in there pretty well,"" Rainey said. He added that sales even in general merchandise categories improved year over year.Walmart had a weaker sales month in April, which mirrored retail sales numbers released by the Commerce Department on Wednesday, but that was offset by sales trends in the other months of the quarter. Rainey chalked up a weaker April to Easter shifting into March, along with cooler and rainier weather.He said sales have picked up again in May and looked similar to the average of the fiscal first quarter.On the earnings call, McMillon emphasized Walmart's expansion of its online business and success getting more customers to buy other items besides groceries. Groceries drive most of Walmart's business — accounting for nearly 60% of the company's U.S. sales in the most recent full fiscal year — but aren't as profitable as selling items like clothing or makeup.""We punched below our weight on general merchandise, specifically in apparel and home, for a really long time, maybe forever, and I think the progress we're seeing right now is driven by the in-store remodels and e-commerce,"" McMillon said.As Walmart tries to appeal to younger and more affluent households, it recently launched a new private-label grocery brand, which includes bolder flavors, plant-based items and more. It is also upgrading and modernizing more than 1,400 stores across the country. The renovated stores showcase some of the retailer's newer and more fashion-forward brands like Love & Sports, an activewear brand developed with fashion designer Michelle Smith and SoulCycle instructor Stacey Griffith, and a kitchen and home decor line called Beautiful, which was developed with Drew Barrymore.Walmart has looked beyond retail to drive profits higher and fend off rivals like Amazon.Those newer businesses like advertising and its subscription-based membership program, Walmart+, lifted its profit during the quarter and contributed to its operating income growth outpacing its sales growth. The company's global advertising business grew 24% during the quarter, including 26% growth for the segment in the U.S.The company's third-party marketplace has also been a significant driver of the business. Like Amazon, Walmart has expanded its online business by welcoming sellers onto its website, and then made more money by offering advertisement and fulfillment services to those sellers.In the U.S., marketplace sellers increased 36% in the quarter and the marketplace now carries more than 420 different items, McMillon said on an earnings call. In Mexico, the number of marketplace sellers grew by more than 50% with the total item count up nearly 80%.Rainey told CNBC that a third of Walmart's year-over-year operating income gains came from those newer businesses.Walmart has been slashing spending in some areas and investing heavily in others. Earlier this week, the company said it would lay off and relocate hundreds of its corporate employees, including the transfer of many to its headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas. That move came on the heels of the retailer shuttering its Walmart health clinics, a network of doctor and dentist offices that had opened next to its stores.On the other hand, the big-box retailer has poured money into other efforts. As it chases advertising dollars, Walmart announced in February that it will acquire smart TV maker Vizio in a $2.3 billion deal.Rainey said Walmart's announcement this week, which will relocate hundreds of people who currently work from their homes or in offices in Dallas, Toronto and Atlanta, is about shifting away from remote work, not about cost cuts. The move also included layoffs. Walmart has not announced a five-day-a-week office policy, but has said it wants employees to work from the office the majority of the time.""We just feel strongly in the benefit of working together,"" he said. ""One of our competitive advantages is our culture — and that's fostered by being together.""Shares of Walmart closed Thursday at $64, bringing the company's market cap to $515.83 billion. As of Thursday's close, the company's stock is up about 22% so far this year, surpassing the roughly 11% gains of the S&P 500 during the same period.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"['In this articleWalmart on Thursday topped quarterly earnings and revenue expectations, as the discounter made significant e-commerce gains, drove profits with newer businesses like advertising and won over more high-income shoppers.', 'The big-box retailer said it now expects to hit the high end or slightly top its previous full-year guidance.', 'Walmart had expected net sales growth of 3% to 4% and adjusted earnings per share of between $2.23 and $2.37.Shares of the company hit an all-time high Thursday and closed about 7% higher.', ""In an interview with CNBC, Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey said one of the factors boosting Walmart's grocery business is the widening gap between the price of cooking at home and buying food at fast-food chains or restaurants."", 'Plus, he added, shoppers appreciate the convenience that Walmart offers.', 'For the first time, its delivery business surpassed its store pickup in terms of volume, Rainey said.', '""We\'ve got customers that are coming to us more frequently than they have before and newer customers that we haven\'t traditionally had, and they\'re coming into a Walmart whether it\'s a virtual store online, or whether it\'s one of our physical stores,"" Rainey said.', ""Here's what the discounter reported for the fiscal first quarter compared with what Wall Street expected, according to a survey of analysts by LSEG:Walmart's net income jumped to $5.10 billion, or 63 cents per share, in the three-month period that ended April 30, compared with $1.67 billion, or 21 cents per share, in the year-ago period."", 'Revenue climbed 6% from $152.30 billion in the year-ago quarter.', 'That increase includes a benefit of roughly 1% from an additional selling day in the period.', ""As the nation's largest retailer and private employer, Walmart is often viewed as a bellwether for the U.S. economy."", 'Yet it has generally fared better during an inflationary period than other retailers because it sells staples like groceries and has a value-oriented reputation.', 'Same-store sales for Walmart U.S. climbed by 3.8%, excluding fuel.', 'The industry metric includes sales from stores and clubs open for at least a year.', ""At Sam's Club, same-store sales rose 4.4% year over year, excluding fuel."", ""E-commerce sales shot up by 22% year over year for Walmart U.S., fueled by store pickup and delivery of online orders, as well as the company's growing third-party marketplace."", ""Walmart's customers in the U.S. made more visits to its stores and website in the quarter, but spent roughly the same as in the year-ago period."", 'Transactions rose 3.8% and average ticket was flat compared with the year-ago quarter.', 'This week brought promising news for Walmart and other retailers: Inflation eased in April, according to the Labor Department data released Wednesday.', 'The consumer price index was up 3.4% year over year.', 'The closely watched number tracks how much goods and services cost at the cash register.', 'Walmart saw some signs of easing, too.', ""On the company's earnings call, CEO Doug McMillon said inflation in the U.S. was only up 0.4% for the quarter, with mid-single digit deflation on general merchandise and low-single digit inflation in food."", 'He said the company has increased ""rollbacks,"" price reductions on specific items that it typically advertises on its website or with signs in its stores.', 'Even so, the discounter has noticed the impact of inflation, as its shoppers have been selective with purchases.', 'Rainey said customers\' ""wallets are still stretched.""', 'He said shoppers have bought less general merchandise, such as home goods and electronics, as they prioritize spending on food and health-related items, a trend that the company has seen for the past several quarters.', 'Still, ""even the low-income consumer seems to be holding in there pretty well,"" Rainey said.', 'He added that sales even in general merchandise categories improved year over year.', 'Walmart had a weaker sales month in April, which mirrored retail sales numbers released by the Commerce Department on Wednesday, but that was offset by sales trends in the other months of the quarter.', 'Rainey chalked up a weaker April to Easter shifting into March, along with cooler and rainier weather.', 'He said sales have picked up again in May and looked similar to the average of the fiscal first quarter.', ""On the earnings call, McMillon emphasized Walmart's expansion of its online business and success getting more customers to buy other items besides groceries."", ""Groceries drive most of Walmart's business — accounting for nearly 60% of the company's U.S. sales in the most recent full fiscal year — but aren't as profitable as selling items like clothing or makeup."", '""We punched below our weight on general merchandise, specifically in apparel and home, for a really long time, maybe forever, and I think the progress we\'re seeing right now is driven by the in-store remodels and e-commerce,"" McMillon said.', 'As Walmart tries to appeal to younger and more affluent households, it recently launched a new private-label grocery brand, which includes bolder flavors, plant-based items and more.', 'It is also upgrading and modernizing more than 1,400 stores across the country.', ""The renovated stores showcase some of the retailer's newer and more fashion-forward brands like Love & Sports, an activewear brand developed with fashion designerMichelle Smith and SoulCycle instructor Stacey Griffith, and a kitchen and home decor line called Beautiful, which was developed with Drew Barrymore."", 'Walmart has looked beyond retail to drive profits higher and fend off rivals like Amazon.', 'Those newer businesses like advertising and its subscription-based membership program, Walmart+, lifted its profit during the quarter and contributed to its operating income growth outpacing its sales growth.', ""The company's global advertising business grew 24% during the quarter, including 26% growth for the segment in the U.S.The company's third-party marketplace has also been a significant driver of the business."", 'Like Amazon, Walmart has expanded its online business by welcoming sellers onto its website, and then made more money by offering advertisement and fulfillment services to those sellers.', 'In the U.S., marketplace sellers increased 36% in the quarter and the marketplace now carries more than 420 different items, McMillon said on an earnings call.', ""In Mexico, the number of marketplace sellers grew by more than 50% with the total item count up nearly 80%.Rainey told CNBC that a third of Walmart's year-over-year operating income gains came from those newer businesses."", 'Walmart has been slashing spending in some areas and investing heavily in others.', 'Earlier this week, the company said it would lay off and relocate hundreds of its corporate employees, including the transfer of many to its headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas.', 'That move came on the heels of the retailer shuttering its Walmart health clinics, a network of doctor and dentist offices that had opened next to its stores.', 'On the other hand, the big-box retailer has poured money into other efforts.', 'As it chases advertising dollars, Walmart announced in February that it will acquire smart TV maker Vizio in a $2.3 billion deal.', ""Rainey said Walmart's announcement this week, which will relocate hundreds of people who currently work from their homes or in offices in Dallas, Toronto and Atlanta, is about shifting away from remote work, not about cost cuts."", 'The move also included layoffs.', 'Walmart has not announced a five-day-a-week office policy, but has said it wants employees to work from the office the majority of the time.', '""We just feel strongly in the benefit of working together,"" he said. ""', ""One of our competitive advantages is our culture — and that's fostered by being together."", '""Shares of Walmart closed Thursday at $64, bringing the company\'s market cap to $515.83 billion.', ""As of Thursday's close, the company's stock is up about 22% so far this year, surpassing the roughly 11% gains of the S&P 500 during the same period.""]",0.2787178960899139,"In this articleWalmart on Thursday topped quarterly earnings and revenue expectations, as the discounter made significant e-commerce gains, drove profits with newer businesses like advertising and won over more high-income shoppers.","Rainey chalked up a weaker April to Easter shifting into March, along with cooler and rainier weather.",0.6785912852395665,The consumer price index was up 3.4% year over year.,"Walmart had a weaker sales month in April, which mirrored retail sales numbers released by the Commerce Department on Wednesday, but that was offset by sales trends in the other months of the quarter.",2024-05-21 Nestle to launch Vital Pursuit frozen-food brand targeting GLP-1 users,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/21/nestle-to-launch-vital-pursuit-frozen-food-for-glp-1-users.html,2024-05-21T13:23:12+0000,"Nestle is launching a new frozen-food brand, Vital Pursuit, aimed at the growing market of consumers who are using GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy.Over the last year, the buzzy weight loss and diabetes drugs have taken off as more options hit the market and as celebrities like Oprah Winfrey and Elon Musk endorse them. Roughly one in eight adults in the U.S. reported using a GLP-1 drug at some point, according to a recent survey from health policy research organization KFF. Roughly half of those Americans, or around 6% of U.S. adults, are currently using one of the treatments. The total number of U.S. consumers taking the medication could soar to 31.5 million, or 9% of the total population, by 2035, according to research from Morgan Stanley.As the drugs' popularity has soared, investors have grown concerned about what their rise means for food and beverage companies and fast-food chains. People who take the medication typically eat less frequently because they have fewer cravings and desire more protein and less sugary and fatty foods. In October, Walmart U.S. CEO John Furner told Bloomberg that people who pick up GLP-1 drugs from its pharmacies are buying less food, typically with fewer calories.But Nestle sees an opportunity to cater to those consumers through Vital Pursuit.""The reality is, for the last 25 years, the diet has been dying, in a sense. ... For me, what we've done is actually given consumers a new tool that actually gives them confidence and success on this journey,"" Nestle's North America CEO Steve Presley told CNBC.The new brand's initial lineup of 12 items will include frozen bowls with whole grains or protein-packed pasta, along with sandwich melts and pizzas. The products will include one or more essential nutrients, like protein, calcium or iron. The company plans to sell Vital Pursuit items for $4.99 or under and offer gluten-free options.Vital Pursuit's packaging won't include mentions of GLP-1 medications, but Nestle said the company will more directly connect the brand to the drugs on social media.The new line will hit the freezer aisle by the fourth quarter.In recent years, Nestle has also tried to focus more on health-conscious consumers. In 2018, it sold its U.S. candy business, which includes brands like Butterfinger, Crunch and Laffy Taffy, to Ferrero for $2.8 billion. Nestle's food business, which includes brands like Stouffer's and Toll House, only accounts for 14.5% of its U.S. sales.Nestle already owns Lean Cuisine, which was founded in 1981 as a healthier alternative to other frozen meals. The company chose to create a new brand to reach GLP-1 users because Lean's branding focuses on consumers looking to limit their calories. However, people who take GLP-1 medications may want to consume more nutrients, such as protein, which can help with the muscle loss associated with the drugs. ""The consumer research shows that there are certain nutrients and certain macros that need to be delivered to actually help the consumers stay healthy along the journey of the GLP-1 treatment,"" Presley said.Shares of Swiss-based Nestle have fallen 16% this year, dragging its market value down to $278 billion. The food company expects that its global growth will slow this year as inflation-weary consumers buy less of its products.",CNBC,21/05/2024,"['Nestle is launching a new frozen-food brand, Vital Pursuit, aimed at the growing market of consumers who are using GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy.', 'Over the last year, the buzzy weight loss and diabetes drugs have taken off as more options hit the market and as celebrities like Oprah Winfrey and Elon Musk endorse them.', 'Roughly one in eight adults in the U.S. reported using a GLP-1 drug at some point, according to a recentsurveyfrom health policy research organization KFF.', 'Roughly half of those Americans, or around 6% of U.S. adults, are currently using one of the treatments.', 'The total number of U.S. consumers taking the medication could soar to 31.5 million, or 9% of the total population, by 2035, according to research from Morgan Stanley.', ""As the drugs' popularity has soared, investors have grown concerned about what their rise means for food and beverage companies and fast-food chains."", 'People who take the medication typically eat less frequently because they have fewer cravings and desire more protein and less sugary and fatty foods.', 'In October, Walmart U.S. CEO John Furner told Bloomberg that people who pick up GLP-1 drugs from its pharmacies are buying less food, typically with fewer calories.', 'But Nestle sees an opportunity to cater to those consumers through Vital Pursuit.', '""The reality is, for the last 25 years, the diet has been dying, in a sense. ...', 'For me, what we\'ve done is actually given consumers a new tool that actually gives them confidence and success on this journey,"" Nestle\'s North America CEO Steve Presley told CNBC.The new brand\'s initial lineup of 12 items will include frozen bowls with whole grains or protein-packed pasta, along with sandwich melts and pizzas.', 'The products will include one or more essential nutrients, like protein, calcium or iron.', 'The company plans to sell Vital Pursuit items for $4.99 or under and offer gluten-free options.', ""Vital Pursuit's packaging won't include mentions of GLP-1 medications, but Nestle said the company will more directly connect the brand to the drugs on social media."", 'The new line will hit the freezer aisle by the fourth quarter.', 'In recent years, Nestle has also tried to focus more on health-conscious consumers.', 'In 2018, it sold its U.S. candy business, which includes brands like Butterfinger, Crunch and Laffy Taffy, to Ferrero for $2.8 billion.', ""Nestle's food business, which includes brands like Stouffer's and Toll House, only accounts for 14.5% of its U.S. sales."", 'Nestle already owns Lean Cuisine, which was founded in 1981 as a healthier alternative to other frozen meals.', ""The company chose to create a new brand to reach GLP-1 users because Lean's branding focuses on consumers looking to limit their calories."", 'However, people who take GLP-1 medications may want to consume more nutrients, such as protein, which can help with the muscle loss associated with the drugs.', '""The consumer research shows that there are certain nutrients and certain macros that need to be delivered to actually help the consumers stay healthy along the journey of the GLP-1 treatment,"" Presley said.', 'Shares of Swiss-based Nestle have fallen 16% this year, dragging its market value down to $278 billion.', 'The food company expects that its global growth will slow this year as inflation-weary consumers buy less of its products.']",0.3001622429968393,"""The consumer research shows that there are certain nutrients and certain macros that need to be delivered to actually help the consumers stay healthy along the journey of the GLP-1 treatment,"" Presley said.",,0.249001994729042,"The total number of U.S. consumers taking the medication could soar to 31.5 million, or 9% of the total population, by 2035, according to research from Morgan Stanley.",The food company expects that its global growth will slow this year as inflation-weary consumers buy less of its products.,2024-05-21 Pixar is laying off 14% of its workforce as Disney scales back content,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/21/disneys-pixar-layoffs.html,2024-05-21T16:52:56+0000,"Long-expected layoffs are hitting Pixar Animation Studios on Tuesday.Pixar will lay off about 175 employees, or around 14% of the studio's workforce, a spokesperson for parent company Walt Disney told CNBC. The cuts come as CEO Bob Iger works toward his overarching mandate to focus on the quality of its content, not the quantity.Layoffs hit other Disney businesses last year, but Pixar's cuts were delayed because of production schedules. Initially, it was reported that 20% of the animation studio's employees would be laid off.Iger, who returned to the mantle of CEO in late 2022, has been working to reverse the company's box office woes, spurred both by the company's content decisions and pandemic shutdowns. While Disney has seen mixed box office success with several franchises, including the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the company has found it challenging to get its animated features to resonate with audiences.When theaters closed during the pandemic, Disney sought to pad the company's fledgling streaming service Disney+ with content, stretching its creative teams thin and sending theatrical movies straight to digital.The decision trained parents to seek out new Disney titles on streaming, not theaters, even when Disney opted to return its films to the big screen. Compounding Disney's woes, many audience members began to feel that the company's content had grown overly existential and too concerned with social issues beyond the reach of children.As a result, no Disney animated feature from Pixar or Walt Disney Animation has generated more than $480 million at the global box office since 2019. For comparison, just before the pandemic, ""Coco"" generated $796 million globally, while ""Incredibles 2"" tallied $1.24 billion globally, and ""Toy Story 4"" snared $1.07 billion globally.With Iger back at the helm, Pixar will refocus on theatrical releases and move away from short-form series for Disney+.— CNBC's Julia Boorstin contributed to this report",CNBC,21/05/2024,"['Long-expected layoffs are hitting Pixar Animation Studios on Tuesday.', ""Pixar will lay off about 175 employees, or around 14% of the studio's workforce, a spokesperson for parent company Walt Disney told CNBC."", 'The cuts come as CEO Bob Iger works toward his overarching mandate to focus on the quality of its content, not the quantity.', ""Layoffs hit other Disney businesses last year, but Pixar's cuts were delayed because of production schedules."", ""Initially, it was reported that 20% of the animation studio's employees would be laid off."", ""Iger, who returned to the mantle of CEO in late 2022, has been working to reverse the company's box office woes, spurred both by the company's content decisions and pandemic shutdowns."", 'While Disney has seen mixed box office success with several franchises, including the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the company has found it challenging to get its animated features to resonate with audiences.', ""When theaters closed during the pandemic, Disney sought topad the company's fledgling streaming service Disney+ with content, stretching its creative teams thin and sending theatrical moviesstraight to digital."", 'The decision trainedparents to seek out new Disney titles on streaming, not theaters, even when Disney opted to return its films to the big screen.', ""Compounding Disney's woes, many audience members began to feel that the company's content had grown overly existential and too concerned with social issues beyond the reach of children."", 'As a result, no Disney animated feature from Pixar or Walt Disney Animation has generated more than $480 million at the global box office since 2019.', 'For comparison, just before the pandemic, ""Coco"" generated $796 million globally, while ""Incredibles 2"" tallied $1.24 billion globally, and ""Toy Story 4"" snared $1.07 billion globally.', 'With Iger back at the helm, Pixar will refocus on theatrical releases and move away from short-form series for Disney+.—', ""CNBC's Julia Boorstin contributed to this report""]",-0.0605692620657825,"While Disney has seen mixed box office success with several franchises, including the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the company has found it challenging to get its animated features to resonate with audiences.","Layoffs hit other Disney businesses last year, but Pixar's cuts were delayed because of production schedules.",-0.8452608287334442,,"Compounding Disney's woes, many audience members began to feel that the company's content had grown overly existential and too concerned with social issues beyond the reach of children.",2024-05-21 Microsoft thinks it found a way to make PCs relevant again,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/21/tech/microsoft-ai-copilot-plus-build-2024/index.html," Updated 1:40 PM EDT, Tue May 21, 2024 ","Microsoft jumped headfirst into building artificial intelligence directly into its Windows operating system on Monday, announcing new AI computers that could help ramp up flagging PC sales. The developments push the company closer to its long-time goal to “build computers that understand us versus us having to understand computers,” CEO Satya Nadella told the audience at the company’s annual developer conference at its Redmond, Washington headquarters. “I feel like we’re really close to that real breakthrough,” he added. The computers, which are packed with processors that power advanced AI tools, come as PC sales have stalled for years. The company hopes the new machines will boost sales and revive excitement, particularly as AI is expected to become increasingly part of everyday life. Microsoft’s new lineup of Copilot+ PCs, which feature a new Surface Pro tablet and Surface laptop, include AI tools that don’t require internet connection – the AI processing occurs directly on the device The new hardware runs on OpenAI’s new GPT-4o technology, which aims to turn ChatGPT into a digital personal assistant that can engage in real-time, spoken conversations and interact using text and “vision.” Announced last week, it can view screenshots, photos, documents or charts uploaded by users and have a conversation about them. The new hardware also plays up Microsoft’s existing AI assistant called Copilot, which works across various products, including Bing and Microsoft 365. It can help with tasks such as writing, keeping track of emails in Outlook or designing presentations in PowerPoint. One new feature, called Recall, acts as a personal “time machine,” allowing users to quickly find things from their computer, such as documents, images and websites. Another allows for real-time translation into more than 40 more languages locally on the device. The company also showed off a new tool called Team Copilot, which serves as a personal assistant, allowing it act as a meeting facilitator to create agendas or take notes on behalf of the whole team, not just an individual user. Microsoft isn’t alone in its AI PC ambition. Dell and Lenovo also recently debuted AI-first PC computers under the Copilot+ AI umbrella, an emerging category that experts widely believe will become the next stage of computing. (Copilot+ is the name of the line of hardware that supports the Copilot software.) Next month, Apple is expected to announce new AI-powered tools for the iPhone and Mac at its annual Worldwide Developers Conference. “Over time, AI capability will become a ubiquitous feature, but Microsoft and its partners have made a solid start,” Geoff Blaber, CEO at CCS Insight, told CNN. “They will need to work hard to ensure that AI becomes a lot more than just a meaningless descriptor with a growing number of features.” Microsoft’s advancements also come at a time when the PC market is ripe for innovation. “This is a much-needed catalyst,” Blaber added. Although the Surface line is relatively small within the overall PC market, it serves as an aspirational brand and a frontrunner in terms of innovation, according to Jitesh Ubrani, a research manager at market research firm IDC. But Microsoft’s move is more reflective of a greater shift happening in the industry toward AI. In June, Apple will likely introduce generative AI – artificial intelligence that is capable of creating new output from images to text – across its iOS and Mac platforms. Reports indicate the company could unveil an AI-powered chatbot that runs on OpenAI’s ChatGPT technology, the same technology that underpins Microsoft’s new CoPilot+ line. Still, Microsoft has already established itself as an early leader in this space with ChatGPT integrated into key products. And it appears those efforts are paying off. Last month, Microsoft reported quarterly profits of $21.9 billion, up from $18.3 billion a year ago. Revenue grew 17% year-over-year growth to $61.9 billion. Microsoft’s Azure cloud business also experienced strong growth – revenue grew 31% – boosted by AI tailwinds. The company continues to go all in on AI in other ways, too. Earlier this month, Microsoft said it is pouring $3.3 billion into building a data hub in Wisconsin to train employees and manufacturers on how to best use artificial intelligence. The new center aims to create 2,300 union construction jobs and 2,000 permanent jobs over time, according to Microsoft. It also plans to use the center to train about 100,000 workers across the state.",CNN,21/05/2024,"['Microsoftjumped headfirst into building artificial intelligence directly into its Windows operating system on Monday, announcing new AI computers that could help ramp up flagging PC sales.', 'The developments push the company closer to its long-time goal to “build computers that understand us versus us having to understand computers,” CEO Satya Nadella told the audience at the company’s annual developer conference at its Redmond, Washington headquarters.', '“I feel like we’re really close to that real breakthrough,” he added.', 'The computers, which are packed with processors that power advanced AI tools, come as PC sales have stalled for years.', 'The company hopes the new machines will boost sales and revive excitement, particularly as AI is expected to become increasingly part of everyday life.', 'Microsoft’s new lineup of Copilot+ PCs, which feature a new Surface Pro tablet and Surface laptop, include AI tools that don’t require internet connection – the AI processing occurs directly on the device The new hardware runs on OpenAI’s new GPT-4o technology, which aims to turn ChatGPT into a digital personal assistant that can engage in real-time, spoken conversations and interact using text and “vision.”', 'Announced last week, it can view screenshots, photos, documents or charts uploaded by users and have a conversation about them.', 'The new hardware also plays up Microsoft’s existing AI assistant called Copilot, which works across various products, including Bing and Microsoft 365.', 'It can help with tasks such as writing, keeping track ofemails in Outlook or designingpresentations in PowerPoint.', 'One new feature, called Recall, acts as a personal “time machine,” allowing users to quickly find things from their computer, such as documents, images and websites.', 'Another allows for real-time translation into more than 40 more languages locally on the device.', 'The company also showed off a new tool called Team Copilot, which serves as a personal assistant, allowing it act as a meeting facilitator to create agendas or take notes on behalf of the whole team, not just an individual user.', 'Microsoft isn’t alone in its AI PC ambition.', 'Dell and Lenovo also recently debuted AI-first PC computers under the Copilot+ AI umbrella, an emerging category that experts widely believe will become the next stage of computing. (', 'Copilot+ is the name of the line of hardware that supports the Copilot software.)', 'Next month, Apple is expected to announce new AI-powered tools for the iPhone and Mac at its annual Worldwide Developers Conference.', '“Over time, AI capability will become a ubiquitous feature, but Microsoft and its partners have made a solid start,” Geoff Blaber, CEO at CCS Insight, told CNN. “', 'They will need to work hard to ensure that AI becomes a lot more than just a meaningless descriptor with a growing number of features.”', 'Microsoft’s advancements also come at a time when the PC market is ripe for innovation.', '“This is a much-needed catalyst,” Blaber added.', 'Although the Surface line is relatively small within the overall PC market, it serves as an aspirational brand and a frontrunner in terms of innovation, according to Jitesh Ubrani, a research manager at market research firm IDC.', 'But Microsoft’s move is more reflective of a greater shift happening in the industry toward AI.', 'In June, Apple will likely introduce generative AI – artificial intelligence that is capable of creating new output from images to text – across its iOS and Mac platforms.', 'Reports indicate the company could unveil an AI-powered chatbot that runs on OpenAI’s ChatGPT technology, the same technology that underpins Microsoft’s new CoPilot+ line.', 'Still, Microsoft has already established itself as an early leader in this space with ChatGPT integrated into key products.', 'And it appears those efforts are paying off.', 'Last month, Microsoft reported quarterly profits of $21.9 billion, up from $18.3 billion a year ago.', 'Revenue grew 17% year-over-year growth to $61.9 billion.', 'Microsoft’s Azure cloud business also experienced strong growth – revenue grew 31% – boosted by AI tailwinds.', 'The company continues to go all in on AI in other ways, too.', 'Earlier this month, Microsoft said it is pouring $3.3 billion into building a data hub in Wisconsin to train employees and manufacturers on how to best use artificial intelligence.', 'The new center aims to create 2,300 union construction jobs and 2,000 permanent jobs over time, according to Microsoft.', 'It also plans to use the center to train about 100,000 workers across the state.']",0.2613193043030551,"The company hopes the new machines will boost sales and revive excitement, particularly as AI is expected to become increasingly part of everyday life.",Microsoft isn’t alone in its AI PC ambition.,0.8417981266975403,Revenue grew 17% year-over-year growth to $61.9 billion.,"The computers, which are packed with processors that power advanced AI tools, come as PC sales have stalled for years.",2024-05-21 How Red Lobster’s misguided endless shrimp promotion drove it into bankruptcy,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/business/what-went-wrong-at-red-lobster/index.html," Updated 3:04 PM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","Last summer, Red Lobster made $20 endless shrimp a permanent menu item. Endless shrimp was a successful annual limited-time offer for Red Lobster for 20 years. But Red Lobster’s latest major shareholder, Thai Union, a Bangkok-based canned seafood company, saw the promotion as a way to sell off the mountains of shrimp it was catching and turned it into an everyday item. (Thai Union became Red Lobster’s largest investor in 2020.) The change cost Red Lobster $11 million. Red Lobster filed for bankruptcy Sunday, and the bankruptcy filing sheds new light on Thai Union’s role in the endless shrimp mishap. Red Lobster said it is investigating the circumstances of that promotion, which Red Lobster management opposed. Under a CEO appointed at the direction of Thai Union, Red Lobster eliminated two of its breaded shrimp suppliers, leaving Thai Union with an exclusive deal to provide shrimp for the chain, the filing said. That led to higher costs, and it did not comply with the company’s typical decision-making process for picking suppliers based on projected demand, according to the chain’s filing. “This decision created both operational and financial issues for [Red Lobster]… saddling the company with burdensome supply obligations” to Thai Union, Red Lobster said in the filing. Thai Union did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment. Endless shrimp alone didn’t doom Red Lobster. The American poster child for seafood was dragged down by a range of factors, say former leaders at the chain and restaurant analysts — including handoffs between a mix of investors and corporate parents and Thai Union’s mismanagement. “Certain operational decisions by former management have harmed [Red Lobster’s] financial situation in recent years,” Red Lobster said in its bankruptcy filing. The explosive growth and popularity of fast-casual chains like Chipotle and quick-service chains like Chick-fil-A over the past two decades also squeezed Red Lobster. And years of underinvestment in Red Lobster’s marketing, food quality, service and restaurant upgrades hurt the chain’s ability to add Millennials to its core Baby Boomer customer base. “Red Lobster was the foundation of casual dining. They had a position of power and prominence and revolutionized how American consumers eat seafood,” said Alex Susskind, a professor of food and beverage management at Cornell University, in a previous interview with CNN. But the company didn’t build on that foundation, Susskind said. “Red Lobster had incredible popularity among Baby Boomers. They didn’t bring in a newer generation.” When the first Red Lobster opened in 1968 in Lakeland, Florida, an hour south of Orlando, casual dining was in its infancy. The brand was started by southern restaurateurs Bill Darden and Charley Woodsby. Darden owned several Howard Johnson’s restaurants, one of the first casual dining concepts. “Our motto was informal and family prices,” Woodsby later said. They saw an opportunity to bring seafood to landlocked people at more affordable prices than fine-dining restaurants. “In most of middle America, you couldn’t get decent seafood. Red Lobster brought it to the masses,” said Jonathan Maze, the editor in chief at Restaurant Business Magazine, a trade publication. “Red Lobster was part of this casual dining revolution.” Just two years into Darden and Woodsby’s venture, General Mills acquired the brand. General Mills owned brands like Wheaties, Cheerios and Betty Crocker, and the company wanted to enter the restaurant industry with Red Lobster’s five no-frills restaurants. By the early 1970s, with General Mills’ advertising muscle behind it, Red Lobster opened restaurants across the South. Red Lobster rose quickly and was the first casual dining chain to advertise on network television, according to a Harvard Business School study. Red Lobster also developed the first national seafood distribution system in the 1970s. “Many diners preferred their seafood fried in those days, and Red Lobster’s hush puppies could be considered an early ‘signature item,’” Joe Lee, the first general manager at Red Lobster and later its president, said in a journal article. “Families were welcomed with high chairs and a 59-cent child’s plate.” By 1978, Red Lobster had 236 restaurants and $291 million in sales. It had 372 restaurants and $834 million in sales in 1985. In 1995, General Mills spun off its restaurant division into a new company, Darden Restaurants, named for Red Lobster founder Bill Darden. The company initially included the legacy Red Lobster chain and Olive Garden, an upstart chain General Mills had started in 1982. But Red Lobster fell behind its sister brand Olive Garden under Darden. By 2008, Olive Garden’s sales had eclipsed Red Lobster’s. Darden also acquired fast-growing chains such as Longhorn Steakhouse, Capital Grille and Yard House. “Darden stopped investing in Red Lobster. Things slowly deteriorated,” Les Foreman, a director of operations and divisional vice president at Red Lobster from 2002 to 2022, told CNN. Red Lobster’s sales began declining and Darden prioritized investments in its other brands. Darden soon faced pressure from activist investors pushing the company to split in two. Darden responded to activist pressure by announcing plans in 2013 to sell Red Lobster, separating the chain from the rest of its business. The following year, Darden sold Red Lobster to Golden Gate Capital, a private equity firm, for $2.1 billion. To help fund the deal, Red Lobster spun off its real estate assets in a transaction known as a sale leaseback agreement. Red Lobster had long owned its own real estate but would now be paying rent to lease its restaurants. Sale leasebacks are very common in the restaurant industry, but the arrangement wound up hurting Red Lobster because it became stuck with leases it no longer could afford to pay. “That produced cost pressures on Red Lobster that they’ve never had before,” said analyst John Gordon. “It became a problem.” At the same time, fast-casual and quick-service restaurants grew with lower prices, thousands of new drive-thru locations and online delivery. These chains pressured the casual dining sector. Casual dining has slipped from 36% of total restaurant industry sales in 2013 to 31% in 2023, according to Technomic, a restaurant research firm. Red Lobster’s controlling shareholder Thai Union also hurt the brand, say former employees and analysts. Thai Union was a top supplier of shrimp to Red Lobster for more than 20 years. In 2016, Thai Union took a $575 million minority stake in the brand. In 2020, Thai Union deepened its financial interest in Red Lobster. Thai Union saw an opportunity to grow its business and also become a bigger supplier to Red Lobster. It also tested squeezing Red Lobster’s waitstaff to the breaking point to save on labor costs, switching from waiters covering three tables to 10. Red Lobster executives began to run for the doors under Thai Union’s management, resulting in a huge amount of C-suite churn. In 2021 and 2022, Red Lobster brought on a new CEO, chief marketing officer, chief financial officer and chief information officer. All left the company within two years. Then came the all-you-can-eat shrimp mishap last year. “We were expecting an increase of 20% in customer traffic, but the actual number was up to 40%,” Thai Union CEO Thiraphong Chansiri said in November. Two months later, Thai Union said it would divest from Red Lobster and take a $530 million loss on its investment. The company blamed the pandemic, as well as “sustained industry headwinds, higher interest rates and rising material and labor costs.” “I’m going to stop eating lobster,” Chansiri said this year.",CNN,20/05/2024,"['Last summer, Red Lobster made $20 endless shrimp a permanent menu item.', 'Endless shrimp was a successful annual limited-time offer for Red Lobster for 20 years.', 'But Red Lobster’s latest major shareholder, Thai Union, a Bangkok-based canned seafood company, saw the promotion as a way to sell off the mountains of shrimp it was catching and turned it into an everyday item. (', 'Thai Union became Red Lobster’s largest investor in 2020.)', 'The change cost Red Lobster $11 million.', 'Red Lobster filed for bankruptcy Sunday, and the bankruptcy filing sheds new light on Thai Union’s role in the endless shrimp mishap.', 'Red Lobster said it is investigating the circumstances of that promotion, which Red Lobster management opposed.', 'Under a CEO appointed at the direction of Thai Union, Red Lobster eliminated two of its breaded shrimp suppliers, leaving Thai Union with an exclusive deal to provide shrimp for the chain, the filing said.', 'That led to higher costs, and it did not comply with the company’s typical decision-making process for picking suppliers based on projected demand, according to the chain’s filing.', '“This decision created both operational and financial issues for [Red Lobster]… saddling the company with burdensome supply obligations” to Thai Union, Red Lobster said in the filing.', 'Thai Union did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.', 'Endless shrimp alone didn’t doom Red Lobster.', 'The American poster child for seafood was dragged down by a range of factors, say former leaders at the chain and restaurant analysts — including handoffs between a mix of investors and corporate parents and Thai Union’s mismanagement.', '“Certain operational decisions by former management have harmed [Red Lobster’s] financial situation in recent years,” Red Lobster said in its bankruptcy filing.', 'The explosive growth and popularity of fast-casual chains like Chipotle and quick-service chains like Chick-fil-A over the past two decades also squeezed Red Lobster.', 'And years of underinvestment in Red Lobster’s marketing, food quality, service and restaurant upgrades hurt the chain’s ability to add Millennials to its core Baby Boomer customer base.', '“Red Lobster was the foundation of casual dining.', 'They had a position of power and prominence and revolutionized how American consumers eat seafood,” said Alex Susskind, a professor of food and beverage management at Cornell University, in a previous interview with CNN.', 'But the company didn’t build on that foundation, Susskind said. “', 'Red Lobster had incredible popularity among Baby Boomers.', 'They didn’t bring in a newer generation.”', 'When the first Red Lobster opened in 1968 in Lakeland, Florida, an hour south of Orlando, casual dining was in its infancy.', 'The brand was started by southern restaurateurs Bill Darden and Charley Woodsby.', 'Darden owned several Howard Johnson’s restaurants, one of the first casual dining concepts.', '“Our motto was informal and family prices,” Woodsbylater said.', 'They saw an opportunity to bring seafood to landlocked people at more affordable prices than fine-dining restaurants.', '“In most of middle America, you couldn’t get decent seafood.', 'Red Lobster brought it to the masses,” said Jonathan Maze, the editor in chief at Restaurant Business Magazine, a trade publication. “', 'Red Lobster was part of this casual dining revolution.”', 'Just two years into Darden and Woodsby’s venture, General Mills acquired the brand.', 'General Mills owned brands like Wheaties, Cheerios and Betty Crocker, and the company wanted to enter the restaurant industry with Red Lobster’s five no-frills restaurants.', 'By the early 1970s, with General Mills’ advertising muscle behind it, Red Lobster opened restaurants across the South.', 'Red Lobster rose quickly and was the first casual dining chain to advertise on network television, according to a Harvard Business Schoolstudy.', 'Red Lobster also developed the first national seafood distribution system in the 1970s.', '“Many diners preferred their seafood fried in those days, and Red Lobster’s hush puppies could be considered an early ‘signature item,’” Joe Lee, the first general manager at Red Lobster and later its president, said in a journalarticle. “', 'Families were welcomed with high chairs and a 59-cent child’s plate.”', 'By 1978, Red Lobster had 236 restaurants and $291 million in sales.', 'It had 372 restaurants and $834 million in sales in 1985.', 'In 1995, General Mills spun off its restaurant division into a new company, Darden Restaurants, named for Red Lobster founder Bill Darden.', 'The company initially included the legacy Red Lobster chain and Olive Garden, an upstart chain General Mills had started in 1982.', 'But Red Lobster fell behind its sister brand Olive Garden under Darden.', 'By 2008, Olive Garden’s sales had eclipsed Red Lobster’s.', 'Darden also acquired fast-growing chains such as Longhorn Steakhouse, Capital Grille and Yard House.', '“Darden stopped investing in Red Lobster.', 'Things slowly deteriorated,” Les Foreman, a director of operations and divisional vice president at Red Lobster from 2002 to 2022, told CNN.', 'Red Lobster’s sales began declining and Darden prioritized investments in its other brands.', 'Darden soon faced pressure from activist investors pushing the company to split in two.', 'Darden responded to activist pressure by announcing plans in 2013 tosell Red Lobster, separating the chain from the rest of its business.', 'The following year, Dardensold Red Lobsterto Golden Gate Capital, a private equity firm, for $2.1 billion.', 'To help fund the deal, Red Lobster spun off its real estate assets in a transaction known as a sale leaseback agreement.', 'Red Lobster had long owned its own real estate but would now be paying rent to lease its restaurants.', 'Sale leasebacks are very common in the restaurant industry, but the arrangement wound up hurting Red Lobster because it became stuck with leases it no longer could afford to pay.', '“That produced cost pressures on Red Lobster that they’ve never had before,” said analyst John Gordon. “', 'It became a problem.”', 'At the same time, fast-casual and quick-service restaurants grew with lower prices, thousands of new drive-thru locations and online delivery.', 'These chains pressured the casual dining sector.', 'Casual dining has slipped from 36% of total restaurant industry sales in 2013 to 31% in 2023, according to Technomic, a restaurant research firm.', 'Red Lobster’s controlling shareholder Thai Union also hurt the brand, say former employees and analysts.', 'Thai Union was a top supplier of shrimp to Red Lobster for more than 20 years.', 'In 2016, Thai Union took a $575 million minority stake in the brand.', 'In 2020, Thai Union deepened its financial interest in Red Lobster.', 'Thai Union saw an opportunity to grow its business and also become a bigger supplier to Red Lobster.', 'It also tested squeezing Red Lobster’s waitstaff to the breaking point to save on labor costs, switching from waiters covering three tables to 10.', 'Red Lobster executives began to run for the doors under Thai Union’s management, resulting in a huge amount of C-suite churn.', 'In 2021 and 2022, Red Lobster brought on a new CEO, chief marketing officer, chief financial officer and chief information officer.', 'All left the company within two years.', 'Then came the all-you-can-eat shrimp mishap last year.', '“We were expecting an increase of 20% in customer traffic, but the actual number was up to 40%,” Thai Union CEO Thiraphong Chansiri said in November.', 'Two months later, Thai Union said it would divest from Red Lobster and take a $530 million loss on its investment.', 'The company blamed the pandemic, as well as “sustained industry headwinds, higher interest rates and rising material and labor costs.”', '“I’m going to stop eating lobster,” Chansiri said this year.']",0.0336547402723664,The explosive growth and popularity of fast-casual chains like Chipotle and quick-service chains like Chick-fil-A over the past two decades also squeezed Red Lobster.,"Sale leasebacks are very common in the restaurant industry, but the arrangement wound up hurting Red Lobster because it became stuck with leases it no longer could afford to pay.",-0.1549297715055531,"“We were expecting an increase of 20% in customer traffic, but the actual number was up to 40%,” Thai Union CEO Thiraphong Chansiri said in November.","“Certain operational decisions by former management have harmed [Red Lobster’s] financial situation in recent years,” Red Lobster said in its bankruptcy filing.",2024-05-21 "Wendy's will offer $3 breakfast deal, as rivals such as McDonald's test value meals to drive sales",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/20/wendys-will-offer-breakfast-meal-deal-after-mcdonalds.html,2024-05-20T20:20:07+0000,"In this articleWendy's will offer a $3 breakfast combination meal starting Monday, as restaurant chains look for new ways to drive sales while consumers pull back on dining out.The deal will include a small portion of seasoned potatoes and a choice of either a bacon, egg and cheese English muffin or a sausage, egg and cheese English muffin, the fast-food chain said.The promotion comes as Wendy's rival McDonald's plans a similar yet limited value meal option as it tries to boost traffic. Last week, CNBC reported the fast-food giant's $5 meal deal would be available in stores for only a month, starting June 25.Consumers have become more selective about where they spend their dollars, and some restaurants have started to see a long expected consumer pullback. Other fast-casual chains have enjoyed strong sales despite higher prices.As inflation lingers, companies that cater to lower-income consumers have faced a particular challenge bringing in customers.Wendy's earlier this month reported first-quarter revenue grew a modest 1.1% to $534.8 million. Its same-restaurant sales worldwide grew only 0.9% in the quarter.McDonald's missed first-quarter earnings expectations last month. Although higher prices have helped the chain's revenue, they have scared away some low-income customers. Chief Financial Officer Ian Borden said the company has adopted a ""street-fighting mentality"" to compete for value-minded diners.KFC, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell owner Yum Brands also posted a disappointing earnings report earlier this month, as revenue missed Wall Street estimates. The company cited same-store sales declines for KFC and Pizza Hut.",CNBC,20/05/2024,"[""In this articleWendy's will offer a $3 breakfast combination meal starting Monday, as restaurant chains look for new ways to drive sales while consumers pull back on dining out."", 'The deal will include a small portion of seasoned potatoes and a choice of either a bacon, egg and cheese English muffin or a sausage, egg and cheese English muffin, the fast-food chain said.', ""The promotion comes as Wendy's rival McDonald's plans a similar yet limited value meal option as it tries to boost traffic."", ""Last week, CNBC reported the fast-food giant's $5 meal deal would be available in stores for only a month, starting June 25.Consumers have become more selective about where they spend their dollars, and some restaurants have started to see a long expected consumer pullback."", 'Other fast-casual chains have enjoyed strong sales despite higher prices.', 'As inflation lingers, companies that cater to lower-income consumers have faced a particular challenge bringing in customers.', ""Wendy's earlier this month reported first-quarter revenue grew a modest 1.1% to $534.8 million."", 'Its same-restaurant sales worldwide grew only 0.9% in the quarter.', ""McDonald's missed first-quarter earnings expectations last month."", ""Although higher prices have helped the chain's revenue, they have scared away some low-income customers."", 'Chief Financial Officer Ian Borden said the company has adopted a ""street-fighting mentality"" to compete for value-minded diners.', 'KFC, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell owner Yum Brands also posted a disappointing earnings report earlier this month, as revenue missed Wall Street estimates.', 'The company cited same-store sales declines for KFC and Pizza Hut.']",-0.0395152853201782,Other fast-casual chains have enjoyed strong sales despite higher prices.,"KFC, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell owner Yum Brands also posted a disappointing earnings report earlier this month, as revenue missed Wall Street estimates.",-0.1785422265529632,Other fast-casual chains have enjoyed strong sales despite higher prices.,"KFC, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell owner Yum Brands also posted a disappointing earnings report earlier this month, as revenue missed Wall Street estimates.",2024-05-21 Scarlett Johansson lawyers up over ChatGPT voice that ‘shocked and angered’ her,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/tech/openai-pausing-flirty-chatgpt-voice/index.html," Updated 9:45 PM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","Actor Scarlett Johansson said in a statement shared with CNN on Monday that she was “shocked, angered and in disbelief” that OpenAI CEO Sam Altman would use a synthetic voice released with an update to ChatGPT “so eerily similar” to hers. The statement comes after OpenAI said it is hitting the pause button on the update after comparisons with a fictional voice assistant portrayed in the quasi-dystopian film “Her” by Johansson. The retreat by OpenAI follows a backlash to the artificial voice, known as Sky, which critics described as being overly familiar with users and sounded as if it had emerged from a male developer’s fantasy. It was widely mocked for its flirtatious tone. “We’ve heard questions about how we chose the voices in ChatGPT, especially Sky,” OpenAI said in a post on X Monday. “We are working to pause the use of Sky while we address them.” Johansson said Altman offered to hire her last September to voice the ChatGPT 4.0 system. She said she declined the offer for “personal reasons.” “Two days before the ChatGPT 4.0 demo was released, Mr. Altman contacted my agent, asking me to reconsider. Before we could connect, the system was out there.” Johansson said she hired legal counsel, and said OpenAI “reluctantly agreed” to take down the “Sky” voice after her counsel sent Altman two letters. “In a time when we are all grappling with deepfakes and the protection of our own likeness, our own work, our own identities, I believe these are questions that deserve absolute clarity. I look forward to resolution in the form of transparency and the passage of appropriate legislation to help ensure that individual rights are protected,” Johansson wrote. The voice in question is not derived from Johansson’s, the company said in a blog post Sunday, but instead “belongs to a different professional actress using her own natural speaking voice.” Altman reiterated the company’s stance that “Sky” was voiced by a different actress in a statement Monday, following Johansson’s claims. “The voice of Sky is not Scarlett Johansson’s, and it was never intended to resemble hers,” Altman said. “We cast the voice actor behind Sky’s voice before any outreach to Ms. Johansson. Out of respect for Ms. Johansson, we have paused using Sky’s voice in our products. We are sorry to Ms. Johansson that we didn’t communicate better.” OpenAI said that with each of its AI voices, it tried to create “an approachable voice that inspires trust,” one that contains a “rich tone” and is “natural and easy to listen to.” The ChatGPT voice mode that used the Sky voice had not yet been widely released, but videos from the product announcement and teasers of OpenAI employees speaking with it went viral online last week. Some who heard Sky derided it as perhaps too easy to listen to. Last week, the controversy inspired a segment on The Daily Show in which senior correspondent Desi Lydic described Sky as a “horny robot baby voice.” “This is clearly programmed to feed dudes’ egos,” Lydic said. “You can really tell that a man built this tech.” Even Altman appeared to acknowledge the widespread parallels users were drawing with Johansson when he posted to X on the day of the product’s announcement: “her.” Johansson said Altman used this post to insinuate “the similarity was intentional.” “Her” is the title of the 2013 film in which Johansson portrays an artificially intelligent voice assistant with whom the protagonist, played by Joaquin Phoenix, falls in love, only to be left heartbroken when the AI admits she is also in love with hundreds of other users and later becomes inaccessible altogether. The criticism surrounding Sky highlights broader societal concerns about the potential biases of a technology designed by tech companies largely led or funded by White men. The announcement came after OpenAI leaders were forced to defend their safety practices over the weekend after a departing employee called the company’s priorities into question. Jan Leike, who formerly led a team focused on long-term AI safety but left OpenAI last week along with Co-Founder and Chief Scientist Ilya Sutskever, posted a thread on X Friday claiming that “over the past years, safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products” at OpenAI. He also raised concerns that the company was not devoting enough resources to preparing for a possible future “artificial general intelligence” (AGI) that could be smarter than humans. Altman quickly responded saying he appreciated Leike’s commitment to “safety culture” and added: “He’s right we have a lot more to do; we are committed to doing it.” The company also confirmed to CNN that in recent weeks it had begun to dissolve the team Leike led, and instead was integrating members of the team across its various research groups. A spokesperson for the company said that structure would help OpenAI better achieve its safety objectives. OpenAI President Greg Brockman responded in a longer post on Saturday, which was signed with both his name and Altman’s, laying out the company’s approach to long-term AI safety. “We have raised awareness of the risks and opportunities of AGI so that the world can better prepare for it,” Brockman said. “We’ve repeatedly demonstrated the incredible possibilities from scaling up deep learning and analyzed their implications; called for international governance of AGI before such calls were popular; and helped pioneer the science of assessing AI systems for catastrophic risks.” He added that as AI becomes smarter and more integrated with humans’ daily lives, the company is focused on having in place “a very tight feedback loop, rigorous testing, careful consideration at every step, world-class security, and harmony of safety and capabilities.”",CNN,20/05/2024,"['Actor Scarlett Johansson said in a statement shared with CNN on Monday that she was “shocked, angered and in disbelief” that OpenAI CEO Sam Altman would use a synthetic voice released with anupdate to ChatGPT “so eerily similar” to hers.', 'The statement comes after OpenAI said it is hitting the pause button on the update after comparisons with a fictional voice assistant portrayed in the quasi-dystopian film “Her” by Johansson.', 'The retreat by OpenAI follows a backlash to the artificial voice, known as Sky, which critics described as being overly familiar with users and sounded as if it had emerged from a male developer’s fantasy.', 'It was widely mocked for its flirtatious tone.', '“We’ve heard questions about how we chose the voices in ChatGPT, especially Sky,” OpenAI said in a post on X Monday. “', 'We are working to pause the use of Sky while we address them.”', 'Johansson said Altman offered to hire her last September to voice the ChatGPT 4.0 system.', 'She said she declined the offer for “personal reasons.”', '“Two days before the ChatGPT 4.0 demo was released, Mr. Altman contacted my agent, asking me to reconsider.', 'Before we could connect, the system was out there.”', 'Johansson said she hired legal counsel, and said OpenAI “reluctantly agreed” to take down the “Sky” voice after her counsel sent Altman two letters.', '“In a time when we are all grappling with deepfakes and the protection of our own likeness, our own work, our own identities, I believe these are questions that deserve absolute clarity.', 'I look forward to resolution in the form of transparency and the passage of appropriate legislation to help ensure that individual rights are protected,” Johansson wrote.', 'The voice in question is not derived from Johansson’s, the company said in a blog post Sunday, but instead “belongs to a different professional actress using her own natural speaking voice.”', 'Altman reiterated the company’s stance that “Sky” was voiced by a different actress in a statement Monday, following Johansson’s claims.', '“The voice of Sky is not Scarlett Johansson’s, and it was never intended to resemble hers,” Altman said. “', 'We cast the voice actor behind Sky’s voice before any outreach to Ms. Johansson.', 'Out of respect for Ms. Johansson, we have paused using Sky’s voice in our products.', 'We are sorry to Ms. Johansson that we didn’t communicate better.”', 'OpenAI said that with each of its AI voices, it tried to create “an approachable voice that inspires trust,” one that contains a “rich tone” and is “natural and easy to listen to.”', 'The ChatGPT voice mode that used the Sky voice had not yet been widely released, but videos from the product announcement and teasers of OpenAI employees speaking with it went viral online last week.', 'Some who heard Sky derided it as perhaps too easy to listen to.', 'Last week, the controversy inspired a segment on The Daily Show in which senior correspondent Desi Lydic described Sky as a “horny robot baby voice.”', '“This is clearly programmed to feed dudes’ egos,” Lydic said. “', 'You can really tell that a man built this tech.”', 'Even Altman appeared to acknowledge the widespread parallels users were drawing with Johansson when he posted to X on the day of the product’s announcement: “her.”', 'Johansson said Altman used this post to insinuate “the similarity was intentional.”', '“Her” is the title of the 2013 film in which Johansson portrays an artificially intelligent voice assistant with whom the protagonist, played by Joaquin Phoenix, falls in love, only to be left heartbroken when the AI admits she is also in love with hundreds of other users and later becomes inaccessible altogether.', 'The criticism surrounding Sky highlights broader societal concerns about the potential biases of a technology designed by tech companies largely led or funded by White men.', 'The announcement came after OpenAI leaders were forced to defend their safety practices over the weekend after a departing employee called the company’s priorities into question.', 'Jan Leike, who formerly led a team focused on long-term AI safety but left OpenAI last week along with Co-Founder and Chief Scientist Ilya Sutskever, posted a thread on X Friday claiming that “over the past years, safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products” at OpenAI.', 'He also raised concerns that the company was not devoting enough resources to preparing for a possible future “artificial general intelligence” (AGI) that could be smarter than humans.', 'Altman quickly responded saying he appreciated Leike’s commitment to “safety culture” and added: “He’s right we have a lot more to do; we are committed to doing it.”', 'The company also confirmed to CNN that in recent weeks it had begun to dissolve the team Leike led, and instead was integrating members of the team across its various research groups.', 'A spokesperson for the company said that structure would help OpenAI better achieve its safety objectives.', 'OpenAI President Greg Brockman responded in a longer post on Saturday, which was signed with both his name and Altman’s, laying out the company’s approach to long-term AI safety.', '“We have raised awareness of the risks and opportunities of AGI so that the world can better prepare for it,” Brockman said. “', 'We’ve repeatedly demonstrated the incredible possibilities from scaling up deep learning and analyzed their implications; called for international governance of AGI before such calls were popular; and helped pioneer the science of assessing AI systems for catastrophic risks.”', 'He added that as AI becomes smarter and more integrated with humans’ daily lives, the company is focused on having in place “a very tight feedback loop, rigorous testing, careful consideration at every step, world-class security, and harmony of safety and capabilities.”']",0.2322638866776335,"OpenAI said that with each of its AI voices, it tried to create “an approachable voice that inspires trust,” one that contains a “rich tone” and is “natural and easy to listen to.”","Actor Scarlett Johansson said in a statement shared with CNN on Monday that she was “shocked, angered and in disbelief” that OpenAI CEO Sam Altman would use a synthetic voice released with anupdate to ChatGPT “so eerily similar” to hers.",-0.0480797131856282,A spokesperson for the company said that structure would help OpenAI better achieve its safety objectives.,"Jan Leike, who formerly led a team focused on long-term AI safety but left OpenAI last week along with Co-Founder and Chief Scientist Ilya Sutskever, posted a thread on X Friday claiming that “over the past years, safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products” at OpenAI.",2024-05-21 It’s back: Targeted Amex card holders can get up to 30% off at Amazon,https://edition.cnn.com/cnn-underscored/deals/amazon-amex-discount-promotion," 11:21 AM EST, Wed February 14, 2024 ","Most American Express card members typically think of their Amex points as opportunities for amazing travel opportunities. While that’s true, there’s another lesser-known use for them — redeeming them for purchases at Amazon. Right now, you may be eligible for an Amazon promotion where you can save big on Amazon purchases by redeeming as little as one Amex point. Targeted American Express card members can save as much as 30% on their next Amazon purchase, for up to $30 in savings when you use Amex points to pay for at least a portion of your purchase at checkout. However, your offer may be higher or lower. This offer is set to expire on June 30, 2024, so even if you aren’t in the market to shop at Amazon right now, you have some time to take advantage of the savings. That said, Amazon also states it will deactivate the offer after 24,167 customers have redeemed it. With many Amazon discounted offers, scoring the deal can be a little complicated. But we’re going to take you through it step by step to make sure you’re getting as much of a discount as possible when you’re shopping at Amazon. To start, you must have an American Express card that earns Membership Rewards points. Amex cards that earn other types of rewards, such as cash back or airline miles, won’t work. But there are plenty of Amex cards that earn Membership Rewards points — a small sampling of them is at the end of this story. Next, you’ll need to link your Amazon and American Express accounts. Add your American Express card as a payment method in your Amazon account, if you haven’t already. Then look for the option to enroll in “Shop with Points” under the “Your Account” tab, and click the “Enroll” button for the Amex card you just added. Once your accounts are connected, you’ll need to activate the offer by clicking on this link. Remember, this is a targeted promotion, so not everyone will be eligible for it — you could be targeted for any one of the offers or none of them. When you click on the link, if you see a message that you’re not eligible, then you’re unfortunately not targeted for this particular promotion. But even if you’re not targeted, don’t give up hope. If you just enrolled in “Shop with Points,” you may need to wait 24 hours for Amazon’s records to refresh before knowing if you’re targeted, so check back in a day or so. If you’re eligible, activate the offer by clicking on the “Activate now” button — the enrollment page will indicate your particular discount. You can then shop at Amazon as you normally would, though only products sold and shipped by Amazon are eligible for these discounts. Additionally, Amazon gift cards are excluded, though other third-party retailer gift cards sold by Amazon might be eligible. But wait! There’s one more step. When you’re ready to check out, you’ll want to make sure to select your linked American Express card as your payment method. Then you’ll need to use at least 1 point to pay for your purchase for the discount to apply. When paying with Amex Membership Rewards points at Amazon, 1 point equals 0.7 cents. That’s not the best value you can get for Amex points. Frequent flyer website The Points Guy values Membership Rewards points as high as 2 cents each when redeemed for travel. However, it’s important to note that you don’t have to pay for your entire Amazon purchase with points to get these discounts. In fact, you can use just 1 point and pay for the rest with your Amex card, and you’ll still see the discount applied to your order. However, some accounts might see that you need to redeem slightly more points — 714 to be exact — to receive the savings, so make sure to check the terms of your exact offer. To pay with the minimum number of points required, enter $0.01 in the points section at checkout, which will apply just 1 point to your payment, You can use any number of points you want, but if you don’t make this change, Amazon may automatically apply the maximum number of points to cover the entire purchase, so you’ll want to make sure to update the amount before you place the order. Once you’ve applied at least 1 point to your payment, you’ll see the discount added to your order. The discount will apply on every order you place through June 30 until you hit the total maximum in savings — which will depend on your particular offer. Let’s take a look at some examples of how you can apply this discount to your upcoming Amazon purchases, even if you don’t need anything from Amazon right at the moment. With airlines having regular delays and cancellations over the last year, placing an Apple AirTag on your luggage can be a great way to track the location of your belongings. An Apple AirTag 4 Pack is currently priced at $78.99 before taxes and shipping, but if you’re targeted for the 30% off American Express offer, that’ll bring the pack down to $55.30, or around $13.83 per AirTag before tax. Or, if you’re hoping to pick up a set of new Apple AirPods Pro 2, right now Amazon is selling them for $189.99. But you can knock that down even further to as low as $159.99 before taxes if you’re targeted for this offer. Even if you aren’t eligible for any of these particular Amex promotions, offers like this typically resurface many times throughout the year, so keep on checking back. Amazon often runs similar promotions for other credit cards, so check out our guides to discounts for Chase and Discover card holders to see what’s available. You might also find that even if you aren’t eligible now for one of these offers, you could magically become targeted in a few weeks, so keep on checking the link to see if you’ve been granted access. Amazon has been eagerly offers some lucrative promotions over the last few years, so keep your credit card accounts linked to your Amazon account, and if you’re targeted for any of these offers, make sure you use them before they expire at the end of the year. Also, make sure you read our guide to the best credit cards for Amazon to be sure you’re using the right card when you buy at Amazon. Looking for a travel credit card? Find out which cards CNN Underscored Money chose as the best travel credit cards currently available.",CNN,14/02/2024,"['Most American Express card members typically think of their Amex points as opportunities for amazing travel opportunities.', 'While that’s true, there’s another lesser-known use for them — redeeming them for purchases at Amazon.', 'Right now, you may be eligible for anAmazonpromotion where you can save big on Amazon purchases by redeeming as little as one Amex point.', 'Targeted American Express card members cansave as much as 30% on their next Amazon purchase, for up to $30 in savings when you use Amex points to pay for at least a portion of your purchase at checkout.', 'However, your offer may be higher or lower.', 'This offer is set to expire on June 30, 2024, so even if you aren’t in the market to shop at Amazon right now, you have some time to take advantage of the savings.', 'That said, Amazon also states it will deactivate the offer after 24,167 customers have redeemed it.', 'With many Amazon discounted offers, scoring the deal can be a little complicated.', 'But we’re going to take you through it step by step to make sure you’re getting as much of a discount as possible when you’re shopping atAmazon.', 'To start, you must have an American Express card that earns Membership Rewards points.', 'Amex cards that earn other types of rewards, such as cash back or airline miles, won’t work.', 'But there are plenty of Amex cards that earn Membership Rewards points — a small sampling of them is at the end of this story.', 'Next, you’ll need tolink your Amazon and American Express accounts.', 'Add your American Express card as a payment method in your Amazon account, if you haven’t already.', 'Then look for the option toenroll in “Shop with Points”under the “Your Account” tab, and click the “Enroll” button for the Amex card you just added.', 'Once your accounts are connected, you’ll need to activate the offer byclicking on this link.', 'Remember, this is a targeted promotion, so not everyone will be eligible for it — you could be targeted for any one of the offers or none of them.', 'When you click on the link, if you see a message that you’re not eligible, then you’re unfortunately not targeted for this particular promotion.', 'But even if you’re not targeted, don’t give up hope.', 'If you just enrolled in “Shop with Points,” you may need to wait 24 hours for Amazon’s records to refresh before knowing if you’re targeted, so check back in a day or so.', 'If you’re eligible, activate the offer byclicking on the “Activate now” button— the enrollment page will indicate your particular discount.', 'You can thenshop at Amazonas you normally would, though only products sold and shipped by Amazon are eligible for these discounts.', 'Additionally, Amazon gift cards are excluded, though otherthird-party retailer gift cardssold by Amazon might be eligible.', 'But wait!', 'There’s one more step.', 'When you’re ready to check out, you’ll want to make sure to select your linked American Express card as your payment method.', 'Then you’ll need to use at least 1 point to pay for your purchase for the discount to apply.', 'When paying with Amex Membership Rewards points at Amazon, 1 point equals 0.7 cents.', 'That’s not the best value you can get for Amex points.', 'Frequent flyer websiteThe Points Guyvalues Membership Rewards points as high as 2 cents each when redeemed for travel.', 'However, it’s important to note that you don’t have to pay for your entireAmazonpurchase with points to get these discounts.', 'In fact,you can use just 1 point and pay for the rest with your Amex card, and you’ll still see the discount applied to your order.', 'However, some accounts might see that you need to redeem slightly more points —714 to be exact —to receive the savings, so make sure to check the terms of your exact offer.', 'To pay with the minimum number of points required, enter $0.01 in the points section at checkout, which will apply just 1 point to your payment, You can use any number of points you want, but if you don’t make this change,Amazonmay automatically apply the maximum number of points to cover the entire purchase, so you’ll want to make sure to update the amount before you place the order.', 'Once you’ve applied at least 1 point to your payment, you’ll see the discount added to your order.', 'The discount will apply on every order you place through June 30 until you hit the total maximum in savings —which will depend on your particular offer.', 'Let’s take a look at some examples of how you can apply this discount to your upcomingAmazonpurchases, even if you don’t need anything from Amazon right at the moment.', 'With airlines having regular delays and cancellations over the last year, placing an Apple AirTag on your luggage can be a great way to track the location of your belongings.', 'An Apple AirTag 4 Pack is currently priced at $78.99 before taxes and shipping, but if you’re targeted for the 30% off American Express offer, that’ll bring the pack down to $55.30, or around $13.83 per AirTag before tax.', 'Or, if you’re hoping to pick up a set of new Apple AirPods Pro 2, right now Amazon is selling them for $189.99.', 'But you can knock that down even further to as low as $159.99 before taxes if you’re targeted for this offer.', 'Even if you aren’t eligible for any of these particular Amex promotions, offers like this typically resurface many times throughout the year, so keep on checking back.', 'Amazon often runs similar promotions for other credit cards, so check out our guides to discounts for Chase and Discover card holders to see what’s available.', 'You might also find that even if you aren’t eligible now for one of these offers, you could magically become targeted in a few weeks, so keep on checking the link to see if you’ve been granted access.', 'Amazon has been eagerly offers some lucrative promotions over the last few years, sokeep your credit card accounts linked to your Amazon account, and if you’re targeted for any of these offers, make sure you use them before they expire at the end of the year.', 'Also, make sure you read our guide to thebest credit cards for Amazonto be sure you’re using the right card when you buy at Amazon.', 'Looking for a travel credit card?', 'Find out which cardsCNN Underscored Moneychose as thebest travel credit cardscurrently available.']",0.2766683229921542,Most American Express card members typically think of their Amex points as opportunities for amazing travel opportunities.,That’s not the best value you can get for Amex points.,-0.0578339397907257,"Amazon has been eagerly offers some lucrative promotions over the last few years, sokeep your credit card accounts linked to your Amazon account, and if you’re targeted for any of these offers, make sure you use them before they expire at the end of the year.",But you can knock that down even further to as low as $159.99 before taxes if you’re targeted for this offer.,2024-05-21 The NBA is picking its TV partners — and a deal hinges on Warner Bros. Discovery's next move,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/nba-tv-rights-deal-hinges-on-warner-bros-discovery.html,2024-05-16T23:14:28+0000,"In this articleWhether it's two people in a marriage or a company and a sports league, it's not easy to break up a 40-year partnership.The NBA and Warner Bros. Discovery's Turner Sports have been in business together for nearly four decades. The relationship is now in jeopardy, as Comcast's NBCUniversal is attempting to steal away its package of games with a $2.5 billion per-year offer, as CNBC has previously reported.The league ended its exclusive window to renew a deal with its two current media partners, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery, on April 22. Since then, the league has set a framework to renew with Disney, bring in Amazon as a new third partner, and sell its other package to either Warner Bros. Discovery or NBCUniversal, according to people familiar with the matter. The league stands to triple the total value of a new deal from about $24 billion to $76 billion or more.Warner Bros. Discovery continues to have discussions with the NBA about keeping the rights, according to people familiar with the matter. The league could still decide to simply renew with its incumbent partner, but it's not likely, said two of the people, who asked not to be named because the talks are private.The more probable path would be for the league to sign papers with NBCUniversal, formally securing its bid. That would trigger a contractual option for Warner Bros. Discovery to match the offer.This is where things might get thorny.Both the NBA and Warner Bros. Discovery have begun poring over legal language to determine if the league can reject a potential match, the people said. The contractual wording is vague, and it's unclear if the NBA has full discretion to walk away from Warner Bros. Discovery if it matches the bid, said the people.If Warner Bros. Discovery decides to match, and the NBA moves to choose NBCUniversal's offer, the sides may be headed for a lawsuit. Warner Bros. Discovery believes it's fairly well protected by the contractual language, one of the people said.Still, that remains hypothetical at this point. It's possible Warner Bros. Discovery won't match NBCUniversal's bid, which would avoid potential conflict.Some league officials are worried Warner Bros. Discovery's balance sheet can't handle spending $2.5 billion a year on the NBA, according to people familiar with the matter. Warner Bros. Discovery has a market valuation of about $20 billion and an enterprise value of about $60 billion, including $43.2 billion of gross debt, as of the end of the company's fiscal first quarter. The company had a leverage ratio (net debt to adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) of 4.1.Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav has both publicly and privately preached the importance of financial discipline for the company.NBCUniversal parent Comcast has a market capitalization of about $154 billion and an enterprise value of $244 billion. Comcast's leverage ratio is about 2.5.NBA officials are more comfortable Comcast can pay what would amount to more than double the previous price for the package, according to the people familiar to the matter. Warner Bros. Discovery had been paying $1.2 billion per year to air NBA games. The new package also includes fewer games than the current one because the NBA is likely to introduce a third partner — most likely to be Amazon.Spokespeople for Warner Bros. Discovery and the NBA declined to comment.Warner Bros. Discovery, Disney and Fox announced Thursday they plan to name their new sports streaming platform Venu, taking inspiration from where live sports are played. The new joint venture, one-third owned by each media company, will offer a bundle of sports networks and ESPN+ at a still to be determined price that's less expensive than traditional cable. CNBC reported earlier this year the price could be around $45 or $50 a month. The service will debut in the fall, the companies have said.The three companies haven't yet formally signed paperwork on the venture as they await regulatory approval. If Warner Bros. Discovery loses the NBA, that will diminish the value of the service for consumers, as NBCUniversal and Amazon aren't partners in the product.Warner Bros. Discovery licenses the rights to other sports leagues and groups, including MLB, the NHL and the National Collegiate Athletic Association's March Madness. The company will also have the NBA next year no matter what, as the new rights deal doesn't kick in until the end of the 2024-25 season.There's been no discussion about shutting down the venture before it launches if Warner Bros. Discovery loses the NBA, according to a person familiar with the matter. Still, without the NBA, Disney and Fox would be contributing the lion's share of sports content for the service. Disney's ESPN and Fox own both college football and NFL packages, unlike Warner Bros. Discovery. The three companies plan to split revenue commensurate with the affiliate fees associated with their linear networks.Warner Bros. Discovery could use the money it saves from not obtaining NBA rights to spend on other sports, such as more MLB games or bidding for UFC, which will likely begin renewal discussions with media companies in early 2025.ESPN plans to launch its own ""flagship"" streaming service in the fall of 2025.Disclosure: Comcast's NBCUniversal is the parent company of CNBC.WATCH: The root problem facing streamers is the lack of daily usage, says LightShed's Greenfield",CNBC,16/05/2024,"[""In this articleWhether it's two people in a marriage or a company and a sports league, it's not easy to break up a 40-year partnership."", ""The NBA and Warner Bros. Discovery's Turner Sports have been in business together for nearly four decades."", ""The relationship is now in jeopardy, as Comcast's NBCUniversal is attempting to steal away its package of games with a $2.5 billion per-year offer, as CNBC has previously reported."", 'The league ended its exclusive window to renew a deal with its two current media partners, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery, on April 22.', 'Since then, the league has set a framework to renew with Disney, bring in Amazon as a new third partner, and sell its other package to either Warner Bros. Discovery or NBCUniversal, according to people familiar with the matter.', 'The league stands to triple the total value of a new deal from about $24 billion to $76 billion or more.', 'Warner Bros. Discovery continues to have discussions with the NBA about keeping the rights, according to people familiar with the matter.', ""The league could still decide to simply renew with its incumbent partner, but it's not likely, said two of the people, who asked not to be named because the talks are private."", 'The more probable path would be for the league to sign papers with NBCUniversal, formally securing its bid.', 'That would trigger a contractual option for Warner Bros. Discovery to match the offer.', 'This is where things might get thorny.', 'Both the NBA and Warner Bros. Discovery have begun poring over legal language to determine if the league can reject a potential match, the people said.', ""The contractual wording is vague, and it's unclear if the NBA has full discretion to walk away from Warner Bros. Discovery if it matches the bid, said the people."", ""If Warner Bros. Discovery decides to match, and the NBA moves to choose NBCUniversal's offer, the sides may be headed for a lawsuit."", ""Warner Bros. Discovery believes it's fairly well protected by the contractual language, one of the people said."", 'Still, that remains hypothetical at this point.', ""It's possible Warner Bros. Discovery won't match NBCUniversal's bid, which would avoid potential conflict."", ""Some league officials are worried Warner Bros. Discovery's balance sheet can't handle spending $2.5 billion a year on the NBA, according to people familiar with the matter."", ""Warner Bros. Discovery has a market valuation of about $20 billion and an enterprise value of about $60 billion, including $43.2 billion of gross debt, as of the end of the company's fiscal first quarter."", 'The company had a leverage ratio (net debt to adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) of 4.1.Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav has both publicly and privately preached the importance of financial discipline for the company.', 'NBCUniversal parent Comcast has a market capitalization of about $154 billion and an enterprise value of $244 billion.', ""Comcast's leverage ratio is about 2.5.NBA officials are more comfortable Comcast can pay what would amount to more than double the previous price for the package,according to the people familiar to the matter."", 'Warner Bros. Discovery had been paying $1.2 billion per year to air NBA games.', 'The new package also includes fewer games than the current one because the NBA is likely to introduce a third partner — most likely to be Amazon.', 'Spokespeople for Warner Bros. Discovery and the NBA declined to comment.', 'Warner Bros. Discovery, Disney and Fox announced Thursday they plan to name their new sports streaming platform Venu, taking inspiration from where live sports are played.', ""The new joint venture, one-third owned by each media company, will offer a bundle of sports networks and ESPN+ at a still to be determined price that's less expensive than traditional cable."", 'CNBC reported earlier this year the price could be around $45 or $50 a month.', 'The service will debut in the fall, the companies have said.', ""The three companies haven't yet formally signed paperwork on the venture as they await regulatory approval."", ""If Warner Bros. Discovery loses the NBA, that will diminish the value of the service for consumers, as NBCUniversal and Amazon aren't partners in the product."", ""Warner Bros. Discovery licenses the rights to other sports leagues and groups, including MLB, the NHL and the National Collegiate Athletic Association's March Madness."", ""The company will also have the NBA next year no matter what, as the new rights deal doesn't kick in until the end of the 2024-25 season."", ""There's been no discussion about shutting down the venture before it launches if Warner Bros. Discovery loses the NBA, according to a person familiar with the matter."", ""Still, without the NBA, Disney and Fox would be contributing the lion's share of sports content for the service."", ""Disney's ESPN and Fox own both college football and NFL packages, unlike Warner Bros. Discovery."", 'The three companies plan to split revenue commensurate with the affiliate fees associated with their linear networks.', 'Warner Bros. Discovery could use the money it saves from not obtaining NBA rights to spend on other sports, such as more MLB games or bidding for UFC, which will likely begin renewal discussions with media companies in early 2025.ESPN plans to launch its own ""flagship"" streaming service in the fall of 2025.Disclosure: Comcast\'s NBCUniversal is the parent company of CNBC.WATCH: The root problem facing streamers is the lack of daily usage, says LightShed\'s Greenfield']",0.000679100756805,"Warner Bros. Discovery, Disney and Fox announced Thursday they plan to name their new sports streaming platform Venu, taking inspiration from where live sports are played.","The relationship is now in jeopardy, as Comcast's NBCUniversal is attempting to steal away its package of games with a $2.5 billion per-year offer, as CNBC has previously reported.",0.1325168354170663,"Comcast's leverage ratio is about 2.5.NBA officials are more comfortable Comcast can pay what would amount to more than double the previous price for the package,according to the people familiar to the matter.","If Warner Bros. Discovery loses the NBA, that will diminish the value of the service for consumers, as NBCUniversal and Amazon aren't partners in the product.",2024-05-21 "United Airlines says FAA cleared it to start adding new aircraft, routes after safety review",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/faa-clears-united-airlines-after-safety-review.html,2024-05-16T19:26:52+0000,"In this articleUnited Airlines said the Federal Aviation Administration has cleared it to start adding new aircraft and routes months after the regulator stepped up its scrutiny of the carrier following several safety incidents.""Today, we got some good news: after a careful review and discussion about the proactive safety steps United has taken to date, our FAA Certificate Management Office has allowed us to begin the process of restarting our certification activities, including new aircraft and routes, and we will continue to coordinate closely with the FAA,"" United said in a note to employees Wednesday.United said in March that the FAA had stepped up scrutiny of the airline after a spate of incidents earlier this year. That prevented it from launching new routes, including flights to Faro, Portugal, ahead of the busy summer travel season.United said that it has more work to do, however.""We will continue to see an FAA presence in our operation as they review our work processes, manuals and facilities,"" it said in its employee memo.United would send requests to the FAA to add aircrafts or new routes, though a spokesperson said it has yet to do so. The FAA said later Thursday that it has not yet ""approved any expansion of United Airlines' routes or fleets."" The FAA said its review is ""ongoing and safety will determine the timeline for completing it.""A clearance from the FAA would be welcome news as United and other carriers expect a record peak season this year.Among the safety incidents in recent months, a Japan-bound United Boeing 777 lost a tire shortly after takeoff from San Francisco in February, and a missing panel was discovered on a Boeing 737 after it landed in Oregon in March.While the planes involved older jets, the incidents come amid heightened scrutiny of the aviation industry after a door plug blew out of a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines earlier this year, a near catastrophe that has created a fresh crisis for the manufacturer.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"['In this articleUnited Airlines said the Federal Aviation Administration has cleared it to start adding new aircraft and routes months after the regulator stepped up its scrutiny of the carrier following several safety incidents.', '""Today, we got some good news: after a careful review and discussion about the proactive safety steps United has taken to date, our FAA Certificate Management Office has allowed us to begin the process of restarting our certification activities, including new aircraft and routes, and we will continue to coordinate closely with the FAA,"" United said in a note to employees Wednesday.', 'United said in March that the FAA had stepped up scrutiny of the airline after a spate of incidents earlier this year.', 'That prevented it from launching new routes, including flights to Faro, Portugal, ahead of the busy summer travel season.', 'United said that it has more work to do, however.', '""We will continue to see an FAA presence in our operation as they review our work processes, manuals and facilities,"" it said in its employee memo.', 'United would send requests to the FAA to add aircrafts or new routes, though a spokesperson said it has yet to do so.', 'The FAA said later Thursday that it has not yet ""approved any expansion of UnitedAirlines\' routes or fleets.""', 'The FAA said its review is ""ongoing and safety will determine the timeline for completing it.', '""A clearance from the FAA would be welcome news as United and other carriers expect a record peak season this year.', 'Among the safety incidents in recent months, a Japan-bound United Boeing 777 lost a tire shortly after takeoff from San Francisco in February, and a missing panel was discovered on a Boeing 737 after it landed in Oregon in March.', 'While the planes involved older jets, the incidents come amid heightened scrutiny of the aviation industry after a door plug blew out of a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines earlier this year, a near catastrophe that has created a fresh crisis for the manufacturer.']",0.2539566092965166,"""Today, we got some good news: after a careful review and discussion about the proactive safety steps United has taken to date, our FAA Certificate Management Office has allowed us to begin the process of restarting our certification activities, including new aircraft and routes, and we will continue to coordinate closely with the FAA,"" United said in a note to employees Wednesday.","While the planes involved older jets, the incidents come amid heightened scrutiny of the aviation industry after a door plug blew out of a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines earlier this year, a near catastrophe that has created a fresh crisis for the manufacturer.",0.1512451086725507,"""A clearance from the FAA would be welcome news as United and other carriers expect a record peak season this year.","While the planes involved older jets, the incidents come amid heightened scrutiny of the aviation industry after a door plug blew out of a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines earlier this year, a near catastrophe that has created a fresh crisis for the manufacturer.",2024-05-21 "Lowe's beats on earnings and revenue, even as consumers spend less on DIY projects",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/21/lowes-low-q1-2024-earnings.html,2024-05-21T17:51:56+0000,"In this articleLowe's topped Wall Street's quarterly earnings and revenue expectations on Tuesday, even as do-it-yourself customers bought fewer pricey items.The home improvement retailer's results echoed those of Home Depot last week. Home Depot missed revenue expectations, which it attributed to a tougher housing market and a delayed start to spring.Lowe's stuck by its full-year forecast. It said it expects total sales of between $84 billion and $85 billion, which would be a drop from $86.38 billion in fiscal 2023. It anticipates comparable sales will decline between 2% and 3% compared with the prior year, and expects earnings per share of approximately $12 to $12.30.In an interview with CNBC, Marvin Ellison said a mix of factors have kept consumers from spending more freely, including pressure from inflation and uncertainty around when the Federal Reserve may cut interest rates.""Interest rates can go down, but you still need consumer confidence come up,"" he said.He said Lowe's held off on raising its full-year outlook as it awaits some of its biggest sales days. Spring is the holiday season for home improvement.Here's what the company reported for the fiscal first quarter compared with what Wall Street was expecting, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:In the three-month period that ended May 3, Lowe's net income fell to $1.76 billion, or $3.06 per share, compared with $2.26 billion, or $3.77 per share, a year earlier.Sales dropped from $22.35 billion in the year-ago period. It marked the fifth quarter in a row that Lowe's posted a year-over-year sales decline.Shoppers visited Lowe's stores and website less, as homeowners put off larger projects and bought fewer pricey items. Transactions dropped 3.1% and average ticket dropped 1% year over year, Ellison said.He told CNBC that customers have been buying fewer discretionary items, such as outdoor grills and patio sets, and taking on fewer projects like kitchen remodels.Compared with Home Depot, Lowe's draws less of its business from painters, contractors and other home professionals who tend to provide steadier business even when do-it-yourself customers pull back. Roughly half of Home Depot's sales come from pros compared with about 20% to 25% at Lowe's.Yet Lowe's has been trying to win business from more of those pros. Gains with pros and online sales growth helped to partially offset a decline in do-it-yourself spending.Comparable sales for the quarter decreased 6.2%. For pro customers, however, comparable sales were flat for the quarter.Lowe's is lapping a year-ago quarter when the company slashed its full-year outlook and posted a year-over-year sales decline. At the time, Ellison warned investors that the retailer expected ""a pullback in discretionary consumer spending over the near term.""For each of the three quarters since then, Lowe's sales have also dropped from the year-ago periods.Shares of Lowe's closed Monday at $229.17, bringing the company's market value to $131.13 billion. As of Monday's close, the company's stock is up nearly 3% this year, trailing the 11% gains of the S&P 500.",CNBC,21/05/2024,"[""In this articleLowe's topped Wall Street's quarterly earnings and revenue expectations on Tuesday, even as do-it-yourself customers bought fewer pricey items."", ""The home improvement retailer's results echoed those of Home Depot last week."", 'Home Depot missed revenue expectations, which it attributed to a tougher housing market and a delayed start to spring.', ""Lowe's stuck by its full-year forecast."", 'It said it expects total sales of between $84 billion and $85 billion, which would be a drop from $86.38 billion in fiscal 2023.', 'It anticipates comparable sales will decline between 2% and 3% compared with the prior year, and expects earnings per share of approximately $12 to $12.30.In an interview with CNBC, Marvin Ellison said a mix of factors have kept consumers from spending more freely, including pressure from inflation and uncertainty around when the Federal Reserve may cut interest rates.', '""Interest rates can go down, but you still need consumer confidence come up,"" he said.', ""He said Lowe's held off on raising its full-year outlook as it awaits some of its biggest sales days."", 'Spring is the holiday season for home improvement.', ""Here's what the company reported for the fiscal first quarter compared with what Wall Street was expecting, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:In the three-month period that ended May 3, Lowe's net income fell to $1.76 billion, or $3.06 per share, compared with $2.26 billion, or $3.77 per share, a year earlier."", 'Sales dropped from $22.35 billion in the year-ago period.', ""It marked the fifth quarter in a row that Lowe's posted a year-over-year sales decline."", ""Shoppers visited Lowe's stores and website less, as homeowners put off larger projects and bought fewer pricey items."", 'Transactions dropped 3.1% and average ticket dropped 1% year over year, Ellison said.', 'He told CNBC that customers have been buying fewer discretionary items, such as outdoor grills and patio sets, and taking on fewer projects like kitchen remodels.', ""Compared with Home Depot, Lowe's draws less of its business from painters, contractors and other home professionals who tend to provide steadier business even when do-it-yourself customers pull back."", ""Roughly half of Home Depot's sales come from pros compared with about 20% to 25% at Lowe's."", ""Yet Lowe's has been trying to win business from more of those pros."", 'Gains with pros and online sales growth helped to partially offset a decline in do-it-yourself spending.', 'Comparable sales for the quarter decreased 6.2%.', 'For pro customers, however, comparable sales were flat for the quarter.', ""Lowe's is lapping a year-ago quarter when the company slashed its full-year outlook and posted a year-over-year sales decline."", 'At the time, Ellison warned investors that the retailer expected ""a pullback in discretionary consumer spending over the near term.', '""For each of the three quarters since then, Lowe\'s sales have also dropped from the year-ago periods.', ""Shares of Lowe's closed Monday at $229.17, bringing the company's market value to $131.13 billion."", ""As of Monday's close, the company's stock is up nearly 3% this year, trailing the 11% gains of the S&P 500.""]",0.2006188480062568,"""Interest rates can go down, but you still need consumer confidence come up,"" he said.","Home Depot missed revenue expectations, which it attributed to a tougher housing market and a delayed start to spring.",-0.303969019651413,"As of Monday's close, the company's stock is up nearly 3% this year, trailing the 11% gains of the S&P 500.",Lowe's is lapping a year-ago quarter when the company slashed its full-year outlook and posted a year-over-year sales decline.,2024-05-21 Warren Buffett finally reveals the mysterious company he’s invested billions of dollars in,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/15/business/warren-buffett-berkshire-hathaway-chubb-stake/index.html," Updated 11:47 PM EDT, Thu May 16, 2024 ","The mystery is over: Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway disclosed a major stake in the insurance company Chubb, finally revealing the investment he has kept under wraps since last year. Berkshire revealed it acquired nearly 26 million shares of Chubb in a Wednesday Securities and Exchange Commission filing of the company’s first quarter investments. That translates to a value of approximately $6.7 billion. Buffett’s company had shielded the position from public knowledge as it was building the stake, requesting “confidential treatment” from the SEC in previous filings. Chubb, an insurance business that operates in 54 countries, made headlines in March after the company underwrote President Donald Trump’s nearly $92 million appeal bond in E. Jean Carroll’s defamation lawsuit. Buffett, Berkshire’s CEO famous for his investing prowess, has amassed a sizable following of investors who mimic his portfolio moves. Berkshire Hathaway’s stake in Chubb is no exception. Chubb’s stock jumped by more than 8% in after-hours trading on Wednesday. Buffett’s bet on Chubb is familiar territory: insurance companies Geico, National Indemnity and General Re are all subsidiaries of Berkshire Hathaway. The investment in Chubb underscores Berkshire Hathaway’s investment strategy over the past several months. It has seemingly doubled down on financial companies like Ally Financial, American Express and Bank of America while trimming its investments in consumer products. In February, Berkshire disclosed that it sold off 10 million shares of Apple in the first three months of the year, though Apple remains Berkshire’s largest investment. Berkshire also sold 80 million shares of printer company HP in the fourth quarter of 2023, reducing its holdings by 78%. - CNN’s Nicole Goodkind contributed to reporting.",CNN,16/05/2024,"['The mystery is over: Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway disclosed a major stake in the insurance company Chubb, finally revealing the investment he has kept under wraps since last year.', 'Berkshire revealed it acquired nearly 26 million shares of Chubb in a Wednesday Securities and Exchange Commission filing of the company’s first quarter investments.', 'That translates to a value of approximately $6.7 billion.', 'Buffett’s company had shielded the position from public knowledge as it was building the stake, requesting “confidential treatment” from the SEC in previous filings.', 'Chubb, an insurance business that operates in 54 countries, made headlines in March after the company underwrote President Donald Trump’s nearly $92 million appeal bond in E. Jean Carroll’s defamation lawsuit.', 'Buffett, Berkshire’s CEO famous for his investing prowess, has amassed a sizable following of investors who mimic his portfolio moves.', 'Berkshire Hathaway’s stake in Chubb is no exception.', 'Chubb’s stock jumped by more than 8% in after-hours trading on Wednesday.', 'Buffett’s bet on Chubb is familiar territory: insurance companies Geico, National Indemnity and General Re are all subsidiaries of Berkshire Hathaway.', 'The investment in Chubb underscores Berkshire Hathaway’s investment strategy over the past several months.', 'It has seemingly doubled down on financial companies like Ally Financial, American Express and Bank of America while trimming its investments in consumer products.', 'In February, Berkshire disclosed that it sold off 10 million shares of Apple in the first three months of the year, though Apple remains Berkshire’s largest investment.', 'Berkshire also sold 80 million shares of printer company HP in the fourth quarter of 2023, reducing its holdings by 78%.', '- CNN’s Nicole Goodkind contributed to reporting.']",0.0926756691555275,Berkshire revealed it acquired nearly 26 million shares of Chubb in a Wednesday Securities and Exchange Commission filing of the company’s first quarter investments.,Berkshire Hathaway’s stake in Chubb is no exception.,0.4784295260906219,Chubb’s stock jumped by more than 8% in after-hours trading on Wednesday.,"It has seemingly doubled down on financial companies like Ally Financial, American Express and Bank of America while trimming its investments in consumer products.",2024-05-21 JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon signals retirement is closer than ever,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/20/jpmorgan-ceo-jamie-dimon-retirement-approaching.html,2024-05-20T23:12:50+0000,"In this articleJamie Dimon's days as CEO of JPMorgan Chase are numbered — though it is unclear by how much.In a response to a question Monday about the bank's succession planning, Dimon indicated that his expected tenure is less than five more years. That is a key change from Dimon's previous responses to succession questions, in which his standard answer had been that retirement was perpetually five years away.""The timetable isn't five years anymore,"" Dimon said at the New York-based bank's annual investor meeting.The ambiguity of Dimon's plans has made succession timing at JPMorgan one of the persistent questions for the bank's investors and analysts. Over nearly two decades, Dimon, 68, has made his lender the largest in America by assets, market capitalization and several other measures.Still, Dimon added Monday that he still has ""the energy that I've always had"" in managing the sprawling company.The decision of when he moves on will ultimately be up to JPMorgan's board, Dimon said, and he exhorted investors and analysts to examine the executives who could take his place.Atop the short list of candidates is Marianne Lake, CEO of JPMorgan's consumer bank, and Jennifer Piepszak, who co-leads its commercial and investment bank. The executives were given their latest assignments in January.""We're on the way, we're moving people around,"" Dimon said.Even when he steps down as CEO, however, it is likely he will stay on as the bank's chairman, JPMorgan has said.",CNBC,20/05/2024,"[""In this articleJamie Dimon's days as CEO of JPMorgan Chase are numbered — though it is unclear by how much."", ""In a response to a question Monday about the bank's succession planning, Dimon indicated that his expected tenure is less than five more years."", ""That is a key change from Dimon's previous responses to succession questions, in which his standard answer had been that retirement was perpetually five years away."", '""The timetable isn\'t five years anymore,"" Dimon said at the New York-based bank\'s annual investor meeting.', ""The ambiguity of Dimon's plans has made succession timing at JPMorgan one of the persistent questions for the bank's investors and analysts."", 'Over nearly two decades, Dimon, 68, has made his lender the largest in America by assets, market capitalization and several other measures.', 'Still, Dimon added Monday that he still has ""the energy that I\'ve always had"" in managing the sprawling company.', ""The decision of when he moves on will ultimately be up to JPMorgan's board, Dimon said, and he exhorted investors and analysts to examine the executives who could take his place."", ""Atop the short list of candidates is Marianne Lake, CEO of JPMorgan's consumer bank, and Jennifer Piepszak, who co-leads its commercial and investment bank."", 'The executives were given their latest assignments in January.', '""We\'re on the way, we\'re moving people around,"" Dimon said.', ""Even when he steps down as CEO, however, it is likely he will stay on as the bank's chairman, JPMorgan has said.""]",0.0673280442222593,"Still, Dimon added Monday that he still has ""the energy that I've always had"" in managing the sprawling company.",In this articleJamie Dimon's days as CEO of JPMorgan Chase are numbered — though it is unclear by how much.,-0.9450824856758118,,The ambiguity of Dimon's plans has made succession timing at JPMorgan one of the persistent questions for the bank's investors and analysts.,2024-05-21 Peloton shares drop after it announces refinancing to stave off cash crunch,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/20/peloton-shares-plunge-after-refinancing.html,2024-05-20T21:55:22+0000,"In this articlePeloton shares plunged on Monday after the connected fitness company said it is launching a ""global refinancing,"" as it looks to stave off a cash crunch amid falling sales. The company is offering $275 million in convertible senior notes due 2029 in a private offering and plans to enter into a $1 billion five-year term loan and $100 million revolving credit facility. Peloton plans to use the proceeds to buy back about $800 million of its 0% convertible senior notes, which are currently due in 2026, and refinance its existing term loan. Shares fell more than 12% in extended trading after Peloton announced the refinancing, but later regained some ground. Last month, Peloton announced that its CEO Barry McCarthy was stepping down and said it planned to lay off 15% of its workforce because it ""simply had no other way to bring its spending in line with its revenue.""The restructuring was designed to improve Peloton's cash position as demand for its connected fitness products continues to fall. The company has been working to achieve positive free cash flow, which ""makes Peloton a more attractive borrower"" and ""is important as the company turns its attention to the necessary task of successfully refinancing its debt,"" McCarthy said in a memo to staff prior to his departure.In a letter to shareholders, the company said it is ""mindful"" of the timing of its debt maturities, which include convertible notes and a term loan. It said it is working closely with its lenders at JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs on a ""refinancing strategy.""""Overall, our refinancing goals are to deleverage and extend maturities at a reasonable blended cost of capital,"" the company said. ""We are encouraged by the support and inbound interest from our existing lenders and investors and we look forward to sharing more about this topic.""",CNBC,20/05/2024,"['In this articlePeloton shares plunged on Monday after the connected fitness company said it is launching a ""global refinancing,"" as it looks to stave off a cash crunch amid falling sales.', 'The company is offering $275 million in convertible senior notes due 2029 in a private offering and plans to enter into a $1 billion five-year term loan and $100 million revolving credit facility.', 'Peloton plans to use the proceeds to buy back about $800 million of its 0% convertible senior notes, which are currently due in 2026, and refinance its existing term loan.', 'Shares fell more than 12% in extended trading after Peloton announced the refinancing, but later regained some ground.', 'Last month, Peloton announced that its CEO Barry McCarthy was stepping down and said it planned to lay off 15% of its workforce because it ""simply had no other way to bring its spending in line with its revenue.', '""The restructuring was designed to improve Peloton\'s cash position as demand for its connected fitness products continues to fall.', 'The company has been working to achieve positive free cash flow, which ""makes Peloton a more attractive borrower"" and ""is important as the company turns its attention to the necessary task of successfully refinancing its debt,"" McCarthy said in a memo to staff prior to his departure.', 'In a letter to shareholders, the company said it is ""mindful"" of the timing of its debt maturities, which include convertible notes and a term loan.', 'It said it is working closely with its lenders at JPMorgan and Goldman Sachson a ""refinancing strategy.', '""""Overall, our refinancing goals are to deleverage and extend maturities at a reasonable blended cost of capital,"" the company said. ""', 'We are encouraged by the support and inbound interest from our existing lenders and investors and we look forward to sharing more about this topic.""']",0.2533256277869251,"The company has been working to achieve positive free cash flow, which ""makes Peloton a more attractive borrower"" and ""is important as the company turns its attention to the necessary task of successfully refinancing its debt,"" McCarthy said in a memo to staff prior to his departure.","In a letter to shareholders, the company said it is ""mindful"" of the timing of its debt maturities, which include convertible notes and a term loan.",0.1452564001083374,"The company has been working to achieve positive free cash flow, which ""makes Peloton a more attractive borrower"" and ""is important as the company turns its attention to the necessary task of successfully refinancing its debt,"" McCarthy said in a memo to staff prior to his departure.","Shares fell more than 12% in extended trading after Peloton announced the refinancing, but later regained some ground.",2024-05-21 "Dodge and Ram boss Tim Kuniskis, father of the Hellcat, to retire from Stellantis",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/17/dodge-ram-boss-tim-kuniskis-to-retire-from-stellantis.html,2024-05-17T16:57:09+0000,"In this articleDETROIT – Stellantis' Dodge and Ram brands CEO Tim Kuniskis is retiring after a nearly 32-year career with the automaker and its predecessors, the company announced Friday.Kuniskis, who has led several of the carmaker's brands in North America, is best known for leading Dodge for most of the last decade or so. He is considered the ""father"" of Dodge's high-performance Hellcat models and ""the unofficial spokesman"" for American muscle cars.During his tenure, Dodge reestablished itself as a quintessential American muscle car brand. The brand did so with vehicles such as the more than 700 horsepower Challenger and Charger Hellcat models and controversial Challenger Demon drag race cars.Kuniskis will be replaced by Chrysler brand CEO Christine Feuell, who will lead Ram in addition to Chrysler, and Matt McAlear, who will be promoted from Dodge's sales lead to brand CEO and a member of Stellantis' top executive team. The appointments are effective June 1, the company said.The changes come as Stellantis carries out a restructuring, including layoffs and cost cutting. It has struggled with U.S. sales, which declined 1.2% last year in a market that grew 12.3%. The company was the only major automaker to report a yearly decline, according to Motor intelligence data.""I want to take the opportunity to warmly thank Tim for his passion, commitment and contributions to Stellantis and in defining the vision of the future electrified Ram and Dodge brands. I wish him well in his retirement,"" Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares said in a release. ""I am confident that Chris will continue the work of Tim in leading the iconic Ram brand. Matt will bring a fresh perspective, while continuing to draw on the heritage of our iconic Dodge brand and leading the transition of the brand toward a sustainable future.""While the company did not invest in all-new products for Dodge, Kuniskis, a salesperson and marketer, was able to grow awareness and sales of the brand's Charger, Challenger and Durango vehicles over the years. Dodge often sparked interest by increasing V-8 engine performance or announcing new ""buzz"" models.Kuniskis has been a member of Stellantis' top executive team since the company was established through a merger of Fiat Chrysler and French automaker PSA Groupe in January 2021. He also served on the top board for Fiat Chrysler, under late CEO Sergio Marchionne.Kuniskis' departure is the latest in a string of changes to the company since the automaker was established. Recent changes have include a shuffle of Jeep's top executives; North America head Mark Stewart leaving to become CEO of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.; and a shakeup late last year of the company's international operations like the South America and Asia-Pacific regions, including China.",CNBC,17/05/2024,"[""In this articleDETROIT – Stellantis' Dodge and Ram brands CEO Tim Kuniskis is retiring after a nearly 32-year career with the automaker and its predecessors, the company announced Friday."", ""Kuniskis, who has led several of the carmaker's brands in North America, is best known for leading Dodge for most of the last decade or so."", 'He is considered the ""father"" of Dodge\'s high-performance Hellcat models and ""the unofficial spokesman"" for American muscle cars.', 'During his tenure, Dodge reestablished itself as a quintessential American muscle car brand.', 'The brand did so with vehicles such as the more than 700 horsepower Challenger and Charger Hellcat models and controversial Challenger Demon drag race cars.', ""Kuniskis will be replaced by Chrysler brand CEO Christine Feuell, who will lead Ram in addition to Chrysler, and Matt McAlear, who will be promoted from Dodge's sales lead to brand CEO and a member of Stellantis' top executive team."", 'The appointments are effective June 1, the company said.', 'The changes come as Stellantis carries out a restructuring, including layoffs and cost cutting.', 'It has struggled with U.S. sales, which declined 1.2% last year in a market that grew 12.3%.', 'The company was the only major automaker to report a yearly decline, according to Motor intelligence data.', '""I want to take the opportunity to warmly thank Tim for his passion, commitment and contributions to Stellantis and in defining the vision of the future electrified Ram and Dodge brands.', 'I wish him well in his retirement,"" Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares said in a release. ""', 'I am confident that Chris will continue the work of Tim in leading the iconic Ram brand.', 'Matt will bring a fresh perspective, while continuing to draw on the heritage of our iconic Dodge brand and leading the transition of the brand toward a sustainable future.', '""While the company did not invest in all-new products for Dodge, Kuniskis, a salesperson and marketer, was able to grow awareness and sales of the brand\'s Charger, Challenger and Durango vehicles over the years.', 'Dodge often sparked interest by increasing V-8 engine performance or announcing new ""buzz"" models.', ""Kuniskis has been a member of Stellantis' top executive team since the company was established through a merger of Fiat Chrysler and French automaker PSA Groupe in January 2021."", 'He also served on the top board for Fiat Chrysler, under late CEO Sergio Marchionne.', ""Kuniskis' departure is the latest in a string of changes to the company since the automaker was established."", ""Recent changes have include a shuffle of Jeep's top executives; North America head Mark Stewart leaving to become CEO of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.; and a shakeup late last year of the company's international operations like the South America and Asia-Pacific regions, including China.""]",0.2612220211553282,"""I want to take the opportunity to warmly thank Tim for his passion, commitment and contributions to Stellantis and in defining the vision of the future electrified Ram and Dodge brands.","It has struggled with U.S. sales, which declined 1.2% last year in a market that grew 12.3%.",0.1920280575752258,"""While the company did not invest in all-new products for Dodge, Kuniskis, a salesperson and marketer, was able to grow awareness and sales of the brand's Charger, Challenger and Durango vehicles over the years.","It has struggled with U.S. sales, which declined 1.2% last year in a market that grew 12.3%.",2024-05-21 "Learning how to use AI could boost your pay by 25%, study finds",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/21/business/ai-jobs-higher-wages-productivity/index.html," Published 7:32 AM EDT, Tue May 21, 2024 ","Jobs that require artificial intelligence skills offer significantly higher wages than those that don’t, according to new research published Tuesday. Consultancy PwC studied advertisements, posted last year, for a range of jobs, including app programmers, lawyers and accountants. It found that wages for AI-related roles were on average 25% higher in the United States than for comparable jobs in the same field that did not require those skills. The premium was 14% in the United Kingdom, and 11% in Canada. The differences were particularly pronounced in certain professions: lawyers in the United States with AI skills could earn a 49% wage premium and financial analysts a 33% premium compared with workers in equivalent traditional jobs. PwC’s report is based on an analysis of more than 500 million job ads across 15 countries in North America, Europe and Asia. “Countries and sectors that have a high demand for AI skills tend to see higher wage premiums, especially if there is a scarcity of skilled professionals,” Mehdi Sahneh, senior economist at PwC UK, said in a statement. Between 2012 and 2023, the number of jobs requiring AI skills grew 3.5 times faster than the total of all jobs across the countries studied, according to the report. Barret Kupelian, chief economist at PwC UK, also noted that “the menu of skills required by employers in occupations exposed to AI is changing about 25% faster than those which aren’t.” “As pick-up of AI continues, this trend is likely to intensify, creating new roles whilst also reducing demand for some skills that can be done more efficiently using AI,” he added. The report also found that labor productivity in industries most exposed to AI — that is, those where AI can be more readily used to perform certain tasks, such as financial services — is growing 4.8 times faster than in other sectors. A company becomes more productive if it produces the same amount of goods or services, or more, with fewer staff or with its employees working fewer hours. Higher labor productivity is the key driver of higher living standards. “Productivity growth is crucial to boosting real wage growth and sustaining economic growth, particularly when the number of hours worked in an economy may be declining as populations are aging,” Randall Kroszner, a member of the Bank of England’s financial policy committee, said in speech Tuesday. Improving productivity is particularly important for certain countries, such as the United Kingdom where it has grown much more slowly since the global financial crisis than in the years before. “AI could be the missing piece of the UK’s productivity puzzle, bringing a boost to the economy, wages, and living standards,” said Sahneh at PwC.",CNN,21/05/2024,"['Jobs that require artificial intelligence skills offer significantly higher wages than those that don’t, according to new research published Tuesday.', 'Consultancy PwC studied advertisements, posted last year, for a range of jobs, including app programmers, lawyers and accountants.', 'It found that wages for AI-related roles were on average 25% higher in the United States than for comparable jobs in the same field that did not require those skills.', 'The premium was 14% in the United Kingdom, and 11% in Canada.', 'The differences were particularly pronounced in certain professions: lawyers in the United States with AI skills could earn a 49% wage premium and financial analysts a 33% premium compared with workers in equivalent traditional jobs.', 'PwC’s report is based on an analysis of more than 500 million job ads across 15 countries in North America, Europe and Asia.', '“Countries and sectors that have a high demand for AI skills tend to see higher wage premiums, especially if there is a scarcity of skilled professionals,” Mehdi Sahneh, senior economist at PwC UK, said in a statement.', 'Between 2012 and 2023, the number of jobs requiring AI skills grew 3.5 times faster than the total of all jobs across the countries studied, according to the report.', 'Barret Kupelian, chief economist at PwC UK, also noted that “the menu of skills required by employers in occupations exposed to AI is changing about 25% faster than those which aren’t.”', '“As pick-up of AI continues, this trend is likely to intensify, creating new roles whilst also reducing demand for some skills that can be done more efficiently using AI,” he added.', 'The report also found that labor productivity in industries most exposed to AI —that is, those where AI can be more readily used to perform certain tasks, such as financial services —is growing 4.8 times faster than in other sectors.', 'A company becomes more productive if it produces the same amount of goods or services, or more, with fewer staff or with its employees working fewer hours.', 'Higher labor productivity is the key driver of higher living standards.', '“Productivity growth is crucial to boosting real wage growth and sustaining economic growth, particularly when the number of hours worked in an economy may be declining as populations are aging,” Randall Kroszner, a member of the Bank of England’s financial policy committee, said in speech Tuesday.', 'Improving productivity is particularly important for certain countries, such as the United Kingdom where it has grown much more slowly since the global financial crisis than in the years before.', '“AI could be the missing piece of the UK’s productivity puzzle, bringing a boost to the economy, wages, and living standards,” said Sahneh at PwC.']",0.2684520284040836,"“Productivity growth is crucial to boosting real wage growth and sustaining economic growth, particularly when the number of hours worked in an economy may be declining as populations are aging,” Randall Kroszner, a member of the Bank of England’s financial policy committee, said in speech Tuesday.",,0.7970786690711975,"Improving productivity is particularly important for certain countries, such as the United Kingdom where it has grown much more slowly since the global financial crisis than in the years before.","“Countries and sectors that have a high demand for AI skills tend to see higher wage premiums, especially if there is a scarcity of skilled professionals,” Mehdi Sahneh, senior economist at PwC UK, said in a statement.",2024-05-21 Frontier Airlines does away with change fees in budget airline pricing overhaul,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/17/frontier-airlines-change-fees-scrapped.html,2024-05-17T17:18:08+0000,"In this articleFrontier Airlines said it will stop charging customers a fee to change their flights, taking a page from larger competitors as the Biden administration issues stricter rules targeting so-called ""junk fees.""The change is part of an overhaul announced on Friday of the budget airline's longtime pricing model, which brings customers in the door with eye-catching low base fares but charges a fee for everything else such as seating assignments and carry-on baggage. That model is shared by fellow discounter Spirit Airlines.Frontier said it will start offering packages that include some of those add-ons, among others, such as early boarding. While some fares will still allow travelers to add on options a la carte, ""we expect that option to be a minority of customers,"" Frontier CEO Barry Biffle told CNBC.A new ""economy"" bundle that comes with a carry-on and a seat assignment will start at $30 more than a basic fare, while a ""premium"" bundle that offers those perks plus earlier boarding will be $50 more than the basic fare. For at least $100 more than a basic fare, ""business"" bundle travelers will also be able to check two bags and get a seat at the front of the plane with more room.Last month, the U.S. Department of Transportation issued a final rule that requires airlines to tell customers about fees, including those for checked or carry-on baggage, up front, a change the DOT said would save travelers more than half a billion dollars a year.Frontier currently charges up to $99 to change flights if the change is made within a week of the trip, according to the airline's website. Larger rivals Delta, American and United scrapped change fees during the Covid-19 pandemic for travelers who were booked in standard economy class and above. Southwest Airlines does not charge customers to change their tickets.""The truth is the big four [U.S. airlines] all have no change fees on the majority of their products, so we were not as desirable,"" Biffle said. He said change fees were a ""top complaint"" of travelers. Travelers who buy the cheapest option on Frontier will still have to pay to change their flights.Frontier also said flight credits would be valid for 12 months, up from three months, starting with tickets issued on Friday, and that it will reintroduce live phone support for travelers flying within 24 hours or to elite members of its frequent flyer program.",CNBC,17/05/2024,"['In this articleFrontier Airlines said it will stop charging customers a fee to change their flights, taking a page from larger competitors as the Biden administration issues stricter rules targeting so-called ""junk fees.', '""The change is part of an overhaul announced on Friday of the budget airline\'s longtime pricing model, which brings customers in the door with eye-catching low base fares but charges a fee for everything else such as seating assignments and carry-on baggage.', 'That model is shared by fellow discounter Spirit Airlines.', 'Frontier said it will start offering packages that include some of those add-ons, among others, such as early boarding.', 'While some fares will still allow travelers to add on options a la carte, ""we expect that option to be a minority of customers,"" Frontier CEO Barry Biffle told CNBC.A new ""economy"" bundle that comes with a carry-on and a seat assignment will start at $30 more than a basic fare, while a ""premium"" bundle that offers those perks plus earlier boarding will be $50 more than the basic fare.', 'For at least $100 more than a basic fare, ""business"" bundle travelers will also be able to check two bags and get a seat at the front of the plane with more room.', 'Last month, the U.S. Department of Transportation issued a final rule that requires airlines to tell customers about fees, including those for checked or carry-on baggage, up front, a change the DOT said would save travelers more than half a billion dollars a year.', ""Frontier currently charges up to $99 to change flights if the change is made within a week of the trip, according to the airline's website."", 'Larger rivals Delta, American and United scrapped change fees during the Covid-19 pandemic for travelers who were booked in standard economy class and above.', 'Southwest Airlines does not charge customers to change their tickets.', '""The truth is the big four [U.S. airlines] all have no change fees on the majority of their products, so we were not as desirable,"" Biffle said.', 'He said change fees were a ""top complaint"" of travelers.', 'Travelers who buy the cheapest option on Frontier will still have to pay to change their flights.', 'Frontier also said flight credits would be valid for 12 months, up from three months, starting with tickets issued on Friday, and that it will reintroduce live phone support for travelers flying within 24 hours or to elite members of its frequent flyer program.']",0.0549664497380016,"Frontier also said flight credits would be valid for 12 months, up from three months, starting with tickets issued on Friday, and that it will reintroduce live phone support for travelers flying within 24 hours or to elite members of its frequent flyer program.","""The change is part of an overhaul announced on Friday of the budget airline's longtime pricing model, which brings customers in the door with eye-catching low base fares but charges a fee for everything else such as seating assignments and carry-on baggage.",0.3490889271100362,"Frontier also said flight credits would be valid for 12 months, up from three months, starting with tickets issued on Friday, and that it will reintroduce live phone support for travelers flying within 24 hours or to elite members of its frequent flyer program.","""The truth is the big four [U.S. airlines] all have no change fees on the majority of their products, so we were not as desirable,"" Biffle said.",2024-05-21 Jamie Dimon says JPMorgan stock is too expensive: 'We're not going to buy back a lot',https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/20/jamie-dimon-jpmorgan-stock-too-expensive.html,2024-05-20T20:44:19+0000,"In this articleJamie Dimon thinks shares of JPMorgan Chase are expensive.That was the message the bank's longtime CEO gave analysts Monday during JPMorgan's annual investor meeting. When pressed about the timing of a potential boost to the bank's share repurchase program, Dimon did not mince words.""I want to make it really clear, OK? We're not going to buy back a lot of stock at these prices,"" Dimon said.JPMorgan, the biggest U.S. bank by assets, has seen its shares surge 40% over the past year, reaching a 52-week high of $205.88 on Monday before Dimon's comments dinged the stock. That 12-month performance beats other banks, especially smaller firms recovering from the 2023 regional banking crisis.It also makes the stock relatively pricey as measured by price to tangible book value, a commonly used industry metric. JPMorgan shares traded recently for around 2.4 times book value.""Buying back stock of a financial company greatly in excess of two times tangible book is a mistake,"" Dimon said. ""We aren't going to do it.""Dimon's comments about his company's stock, as well as an acknowledgement that he may be nearing retirement, sent the bank's shares down 4.5% Monday.To be clear, JPMorgan has been repurchasing its stock under a previously authorized buyback plan. The bank resumed buybacks early last year after taking a pause to build up capital under new expected guidelines.Dimon's guidance simply means it is unlikely the program will be boosted anytime soon. JPMorgan is likely to purchase shares at a $2 billion to $2.5 billion quarterly clip, Portales Partners analyst Charles Peabody wrote in a March research note.The JPMorgan CEO has often resisted pressure from investors and analysts that he deemed short-sighted. When interest rates were low, Dimon kept relatively high levels of cash, rather than plowing funds into low-yielding, long-term bonds. That helped JPMorgan outperform other lenders, including Bank of America, when interest rates jumped higher.Dimon's desire to hoard cash is not just because of impending capital rules. On multiple occasions Monday, he said he was ""cautiously pessimistic"" about economic risks, including those tied to inflation, interest rates, geopolitics and the reversal of the Federal Reserve's bond-buying programs.Markets are currently underappreciating those risks, Dimon said. For instance, prices of high-quality corporate bonds do not adequately reflect the potential for financial stress, Dimon said.""The investment grade credit spread, which is almost the lowest it's ever been, will be dead wrong,"" Dimon said. ""It's just a matter of time.""Since 2022, Dimon has warned of an economic ""hurricane"" set off by geopolitical risks and quantitative tightening. While the continued strength of the economy has surprised many on Wall Street, including Dimon, his concerns have informed his decision-making process ever since.""We've been very, very consistent — if the stock goes up, we'll buy less,"" he said Monday. ""When it comes down, we'll buy more.""",CNBC,20/05/2024,"['In this articleJamie Dimon thinks shares of JPMorgan Chase are expensive.', ""That was the message the bank's longtime CEO gave analysts Monday during JPMorgan's annual investor meeting."", ""When pressed about the timing of a potential boost to the bank's share repurchase program, Dimon did not mince words."", '""I want to make it really clear, OK?', 'We\'re not going to buy back a lot of stock at these prices,"" Dimon said.', ""JPMorgan, the biggest U.S. bank by assets, has seen its shares surge 40% over the past year, reaching a 52-week high of $205.88 on Monday before Dimon's comments dinged the stock."", 'That 12-month performance beats other banks, especially smaller firms recovering from the 2023 regional banking crisis.', 'It also makes the stock relatively pricey as measured by price to tangible book value, a commonly used industry metric.', 'JPMorgan shares traded recently for around 2.4 times book value.', '""Buying back stock of a financial company greatly in excess of two times tangible book is a mistake,"" Dimon said. ""', ""We aren't going to do it."", '""Dimon\'s comments about his company\'s stock, as well as an acknowledgement that he may be nearing retirement, sent the bank\'s shares down 4.5% Monday.', 'To be clear, JPMorgan has been repurchasing its stock under a previously authorized buyback plan.', 'The bank resumed buybacks early last year after taking a pause to build up capital under new expected guidelines.', ""Dimon's guidance simply means it is unlikely the program will be boosted anytime soon."", 'JPMorgan is likely to purchase shares at a $2 billion to $2.5 billion quarterly clip, Portales Partners analyst Charles Peabody wrote in a March research note.', 'The JPMorgan CEO has often resisted pressure from investors and analysts that he deemed short-sighted.', 'When interest rates were low, Dimon kept relatively high levels of cash, rather than plowing funds into low-yielding, long-term bonds.', 'That helped JPMorgan outperform other lenders, including Bank of America, when interest rates jumped higher.', ""Dimon's desire to hoard cash is not just because of impending capital rules."", 'On multiple occasions Monday, he said he was ""cautiously pessimistic"" about economic risks, including those tied to inflation, interest rates, geopolitics and the reversal of the Federal Reserve\'s bond-buying programs.', 'Markets are currently underappreciating those risks, Dimon said.', 'For instance, prices of high-quality corporate bonds do not adequately reflect the potential for financial stress, Dimon said.', '""The investment grade credit spread, which is almost the lowest it\'s ever been, will be dead wrong,"" Dimon said. ""', ""It's just a matter of time."", '""Since 2022, Dimon has warned of an economic ""hurricane"" set off by geopolitical risks and quantitative tightening.', 'While the continued strength of the economy has surprised many on Wall Street, including Dimon, his concerns have informed his decision-making process ever since.', '""We\'ve been very, very consistent — if the stock goes up, we\'ll buy less,"" he said Monday. ""', 'When it comes down, we\'ll buy more.""']",0.0939214802653052,"""I want to make it really clear, OK?","""The investment grade credit spread, which is almost the lowest it's ever been, will be dead wrong,"" Dimon said. """,-0.1596055142581462,"That helped JPMorgan outperform other lenders, including Bank of America, when interest rates jumped higher.","""Dimon's comments about his company's stock, as well as an acknowledgement that he may be nearing retirement, sent the bank's shares down 4.5% Monday.",2024-05-21 "Spirit Airlines gets rid of change and cancellation fees, joining Frontier",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/20/spirit-airlines-ends-change-fees.html,2024-05-20T16:42:47+0000,"In this articleSpirit Airlines is doing away with both change and cancellation fees, effective immediately, days after Frontier's similar announcement, part of an overhaul of the country's biggest discount carriers' longtime strategy.Prior to the new rule, Spirit used to charge anywhere between $69 and $119 for ticket changes and cancellations, depending on how close to departure the customer made the change.""This new policy is among the best in the industry because it applies to each and every guest,"" Spirit said in a statement to CNBC. ""We have many other enhancements in the works and look forward to sharing more soon.""The changes mark a shift for budget airlines' longtime pricing approach, which includes low base fares to attract customers and add-on fees for advanced seating assignments, bottled water and cabin baggage. Ancillary revenue routinely surpasses those airlines' ticket prices.""As we continue to see the demand and competitive environments develop, we know that we must also change with the times,"" Spirit's Chief Commercial Officer Matt Klein said on an earnings call earlier this month. ""We will continue to test out new merchandising strategies, which we anticipate will change how we think about the components of total revenue generation.""Both Spirit and Frontier are trying to return to profitability in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, while larger airlines that offer both bare-bones fares to domestic destinations and big international networks have posted profits.Most larger rivals such as Delta, American, Alaska and United got rid of change fees during the pandemic except for the cheapest, most restrictive tickets. Southwest Airlines does not charge customers a flight-change fee.Along with getting rid of change fees, Frontier also announced Friday that it will start offering bundles that include add-on options such as early boarding and checked baggage that they previously offered a la carte. Spirit is also offering bundled packages with varying prices that include perks such as checked bags.President Joe Biden and the Department of Transportation have been cracking down on what they deem ""junk fees."" As part of that push, the DOT issued a new rule requiring airlines to be upfront about add-on fees such as those for checked or carry-on baggage, which was subsequently challenged by a slew of airlines.Spirit said the end of cancellation fees were not tied to the new rules.The Biden administration also recently issued a new rule requiring airlines to offer automatic cash refunds for cancellations rather than in response to a customer's request.",CNBC,20/05/2024,"[""In this articleSpirit Airlines is doing away with both change and cancellation fees, effective immediately, days after Frontier's similar announcement, part of an overhaul of the country's biggest discount carriers' longtime strategy."", 'Prior to the new rule, Spirit used to charge anywhere between $69 and $119 for ticket changes and cancellations, depending on how close to departure the customer made the change.', '""This new policy is among the best in the industry because it applies to each and every guest,"" Spirit said in a statement to CNBC. ""', 'We have many other enhancements in the works and look forward to sharing more soon.', '""The changes mark a shift for budget airlines\' longtime pricing approach, which includes low base fares to attract customers and add-on fees for advanced seating assignments, bottled water and cabin baggage.', ""Ancillary revenue routinely surpasses those airlines' ticket prices."", '""As we continue to see the demand and competitive environments develop, we know that we must also change with the times,"" Spirit\'s Chief Commercial Officer Matt Klein said on an earnings call earlier this month. ""', 'We will continue to test out new merchandising strategies, which we anticipate will change how we think about the components of total revenue generation.', '""Both Spirit and Frontier are trying to return to profitability in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, while larger airlines that offer both bare-bones fares to domestic destinations and big international networks have posted profits.', 'Most larger rivals such as Delta, American, Alaska and United got rid of change fees during the pandemic except for the cheapest, most restrictive tickets.', 'Southwest Airlines does not charge customers a flight-change fee.', 'Along with getting rid of change fees, Frontier also announced Friday that it will start offering bundles that include add-on options such as early boarding and checked baggage that they previously offered a la carte.', 'Spirit is also offering bundled packages with varying prices that include perks such as checked bags.', 'President Joe Biden and the Department of Transportation have been cracking down on what they deem ""junk fees.""', 'As part of that push, the DOT issued a new rule requiring airlines to be upfront about add-on fees such as those for checked or carry-on baggage, which was subsequently challenged by a slew of airlines.', 'Spirit said the end of cancellation fees were not tied to the new rules.', ""The Biden administration also recently issued a new rule requiring airlines to offer automatic cash refunds for cancellations rather than in response to a customer's request.""]",0.2186504330868678,"""This new policy is among the best in the industry because it applies to each and every guest,"" Spirit said in a statement to CNBC. """,,0.5704053997993469,"""Both Spirit and Frontier are trying to return to profitability in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, while larger airlines that offer both bare-bones fares to domestic destinations and big international networks have posted profits.","President Joe Biden and the Department of Transportation have been cracking down on what they deem ""junk fees.""",2024-05-21 Red Lobster files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/20/red-lobster-bankruptcy.html,2024-05-20T19:51:14+0000,"Red Lobster has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, continuing the process to shrink its footprint and find a buyer, the company said in a statement.The seafood chain also said it has a so-called stalking horse bid from its existing lenders to buy the company, unless a higher bid comes along.CNBC reported last month Red Lobster was seeking a buyer, weighed down by significant debt and long-term leases. The company recently appointed a restructuring expert — Jonathan Tibus, a managing partner with advisory firm Alvarez & Marsal — as its CEO.In a court filing, Tibus blamed a ""difficult macroeconomic environment, a bloated and underperforming restaurant footprint, failed or ill-advised strategic initiatives, and increased competition within the restaurant industry"" for the chain's need to file for Chapter 11 protection.The chain's real estate portfolio is also a ""huge problem"" created, in part, by Red Lobster's former owners Golden Gate Capital, a source familiar with the company told CNBC. When Darden Restaurants sold Red Lobster to the private equity firm in 2014, it funded the $2.1 billion acquisition partially through a $1.5 billion sale-leaseback agreement, the companies said previously. Under the terms of the arrangement, the majority, if not all, of Red Lobster's locations were sold off, and the chain had to start paying rent on properties it once owned while Golden Gate reaped the profits, the source said. At the time, it was tough to predict that Red Lobster would see sales drop as much as they have. Given how much revenue has fallen, the chain can no longer afford those leases.Red Lobster currently operates 551 locations in the U.S. and 27 restaurants in Canada. The chain closed 93 underperforming locations on May 13 and is asking the bankruptcy court to reject 108 of its leases to further slim down its footprint.The company has 36,000 employees, most of whom work in part-time roles.Orlando, Florida-based Red Lobster has assets between $1 billion and $10 billion and estimated liabilities of $1 billion to $10 billion, according to the bankruptcy filing. Its largest creditor is distributor Performance Food Group, which is claiming the company owes it $24.4 million.""This restructuring is the best path forward for Red Lobster,"" Tibus said in a statement late Sunday. ""It allows us to address several financial and operational challenges and emerge stronger and re-focused on our growth. The support we've received from our lenders and vendors will help ensure that we can complete the sale process quickly and efficiently while remaining focused on our employees and guests.""Red Lobster was founded in 1968 and purchased by General Mills two years later. In 1995, General Mills spun off its restaurant division into Darden, which also housed sister chain Olive Garden.Nearly two decades later, Darden sold Red Lobster to Golden Gate. In 2016, Thai Union Group, a seafood supplier and one of the chain's longtime vendors, bought a stake in the company. In 2020, Thai Union, members of Red Lobster management and investors using the alias Seafood Alliance bought out Golden Gate's remaining stake in the chain.Although Red Lobster survived the pandemic, its business has struggled since then. The chain's traffic has tumbled about 30% since 2019, according to the bankruptcy filing.The company's longtime CEO, Kim Lopdrup, also retired in 2021, beginning a revolving door of CEOs that left the chain with little stability to turn around the flailing business. Tibus is Red Lobster's third chief executive in as many years.In fiscal 2023, the company reported a net loss of $76 million. Some of that loss was driven by its disastrous ""endless shrimp"" promotion. Last year, it changed the offer from once a week to daily in an effort to boost slower sales in the second half of the year. But the offer juiced business too much as diners sought cheap deals, pressuring Red Lobster's bottom line.According to a court filing, the ill-conceived promotion's actual aim may have been more about boosting Thai Union's own sales. Red Lobster got rid of two of its shrimp suppliers under interim CEO Paul Kenny's leadership, leaving Thai Union as its sole supplier of the crustacean. That decision led to higher costs for Red Lobster, according to the filing. The debtors are also investigating if Thai Union and Kenny pushed excessively for in-store promotions, which often led to major shortages of shrimp.Correction: Performance Food Group is claiming Red Lobster owes it $24.4 million. An earlier version misstated the figure.",CNBC,20/05/2024,"['Red Lobster has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, continuing the process to shrink its footprint and find a buyer, the company said in a statement.', 'The seafood chain also said it has a so-called stalking horse bid from its existing lenders to buy the company, unless a higher bid comes along.', 'CNBC reported last month Red Lobster was seeking a buyer, weighed down by significant debt and long-term leases.', 'The company recently appointed a restructuring expert — Jonathan Tibus, a managing partner with advisory firm Alvarez & Marsal — as its CEO.In a court filing, Tibus blamed a ""difficult macroeconomic environment, a bloated and underperforming restaurant footprint, failed or ill-advised strategic initiatives, and increased competition within the restaurant industry"" for the chain\'s need to file for Chapter 11 protection.', 'The chain\'s real estate portfolio is also a ""huge problem"" created, in part, by Red Lobster\'s former owners Golden Gate Capital, a source familiar with the company told CNBC.', 'When Darden Restaurants sold Red Lobster to the private equity firm in 2014, it funded the $2.1 billion acquisition partially through a $1.5 billion sale-leaseback agreement, the companies said previously.', ""Under the terms of the arrangement, the majority, if not all, of Red Lobster's locations were sold off, and the chain had to start paying rent on properties it once owned while Golden Gate reaped the profits, the source said."", 'At the time, it was tough to predict that Red Lobster would see sales drop as much as they have.', 'Given how much revenue has fallen, the chain can no longer afford those leases.', 'Red Lobster currently operates 551 locations in the U.S. and 27 restaurants in Canada.', 'The chain closed 93 underperforming locations on May 13 and is asking the bankruptcy court to reject 108 of its leases to further slim down its footprint.', 'The company has 36,000 employees, most of whom work in part-time roles.', 'Orlando, Florida-based Red Lobster has assets between $1 billion and $10 billion and estimated liabilities of $1 billion to $10 billion, according to the bankruptcy filing.', 'Its largest creditor is distributor Performance Food Group, which is claiming the company owes it $24.4 million.', '""This restructuring is the best path forward for Red Lobster,"" Tibus said in a statement late Sunday. ""', 'It allows us to address several financial and operational challenges and emerge stronger and re-focused on our growth.', ""The support we've received from our lenders and vendors will help ensure that we can complete the sale process quickly and efficiently while remaining focused on our employees and guests."", '""Red Lobster was founded in 1968 and purchased by General Mills two years later.', 'In 1995, General Mills spun off its restaurant division into Darden, which also housed sister chain Olive Garden.', 'Nearly two decades later, Darden sold Red Lobster to Golden Gate.', ""In 2016, Thai Union Group, a seafood supplier and one of the chain's longtime vendors, bought a stake in the company."", ""In 2020, Thai Union, members of Red Lobster management and investors using the alias Seafood Alliance bought out Golden Gate's remaining stake in the chain."", 'Although Red Lobster survived the pandemic, its business has struggled since then.', ""The chain's traffic has tumbled about 30% since 2019, according to the bankruptcy filing."", ""The company's longtime CEO, Kim Lopdrup, also retired in 2021, beginning a revolving door of CEOs that left the chain with little stability to turn around the flailing business."", ""Tibus is Red Lobster's third chief executive in as many years."", 'In fiscal 2023, the company reported a net loss of $76 million.', 'Some of that loss was driven by its disastrous ""endless shrimp"" promotion.', 'Last year, it changed the offer from once a week to daily in an effort to boost slower sales in the second half of the year.', ""But the offer juiced business too much as diners sought cheap deals, pressuring Red Lobster's bottom line."", ""According to a court filing, the ill-conceived promotion's actual aim may have been more about boosting Thai Union's own sales."", ""Red Lobster got rid of two of its shrimp suppliers under interim CEO Paul Kenny's leadership, leaving Thai Union as its sole supplier of the crustacean."", 'That decision led to higher costs for Red Lobster, according to the filing.', 'The debtors are also investigating if Thai Union and Kenny pushed excessively for in-store promotions, which often led to major shortages of shrimp.', 'Correction: Performance Food Group is claiming Red Lobster owes it $24.4 million.', 'An earlier version misstated the figure.']",-0.0049559407481681,The support we've received from our lenders and vendors will help ensure that we can complete the sale process quickly and efficiently while remaining focused on our employees and guests.,"The company recently appointed a restructuring expert — Jonathan Tibus, a managing partner with advisory firm Alvarez & Marsal — as its CEO.In a court filing, Tibus blamed a ""difficult macroeconomic environment, a bloated and underperforming restaurant footprint, failed or ill-advised strategic initiatives, and increased competition within the restaurant industry"" for the chain's need to file for Chapter 11 protection.",-0.3631059433284558,It allows us to address several financial and operational challenges and emerge stronger and re-focused on our growth.,"The chain's traffic has tumbled about 30% since 2019, according to the bankruptcy filing.",2024-05-21 Canada Goose jumps 16% after the company reports growth surge in China,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/canada-goose-goos-q4-earnings-report-2024.html,2024-05-16T20:34:21+0000,"In this articleShares of Canada Goose surged 16% on Thursday after the company reported earnings for the fiscal fourth quarter and announced it was expecting year-over-year sales growth for fiscal year 2025.Here's how the company did:Revenue increased 22% from the same period a year ago.Neil Bowden, Canada Goose's chief financial officer, said on an earnings call with analysts that store comparisons were ""relatively flat,"" but year-over-year sales growth for the period was led by locations in Greater China — the region comprising Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan — which saw a 29.7% increase. The broader Asia-Pacific region excluding Greater China was up 29.1%, and North American sales saw an increase of 24.5%.Net income for the fiscal fourth quarter ended March 31 swung to CA$7.6 million, or 5 Canadian cents per share, from a loss of CA$10 million, or 3 Canadian cents per share, in the year-earlier period.Bowden said the growth was supported by domestic shopping on the Chinese mainland, as well as mainland tourists driving ""strong growth"" in Hong Kong and Macao.Online and in-store sales for the period, he added, were ""bolstered by the company's Lunar New Year marketing campaign and complemented by a longer peak selling period, given the later date of the Lunar New Year compared to last year.""Moving forward, the finance chief said the company is expecting mid-single-digit percentage revenue growth the next fiscal year, which he expects will be guided by advances in the direct-to-consumer business. He also said he expects comparable store sales to grow ""somewhere in the low single digits.""Bowden said Canada Goose's business increase in China and Asia Pacific over the past three months is in line with the view of mid-single-digit growth for the luxury business. North America, however, has been under ""a little bit more pressure,"" he said.This upbeat performance comes after the company announced back in March that it was going to cut 17% of its corporate workforce. Canada Goose reported the layoffs had generated about CA$20 million (US$14.7 million) in productivity improvements and cost savings for the fiscal fourth quarter.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"[""In this articleShares of Canada Goose surged 16% on Thursday after the company reported earnings for the fiscal fourth quarter and announced it was expecting year-over-year sales growth for fiscal year 2025.Here's how the company did:Revenue increased 22% from the same period a year ago."", 'Neil Bowden, Canada Goose\'s chief financial officer, said on an earnings call with analysts that store comparisons were ""relatively flat,"" but year-over-year sales growth for the period was led by locations in Greater China — the region comprising Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan — which saw a 29.7% increase.', 'The broader Asia-Pacific region excluding Greater China was up 29.1%, and North American sales saw an increase of 24.5%.Net income for the fiscal fourth quarter ended March 31 swung to CA$7.6 million, or 5 Canadian cents per share, from a loss of CA$10 million, or 3 Canadian cents per share, in the year-earlier period.', 'Bowden said the growth was supported by domestic shopping on the Chinese mainland, as well as mainland tourists driving ""strong growth"" in Hong Kong and Macao.', 'Online and in-store sales for the period, he added, were ""bolstered by the company\'s Lunar New Year marketing campaign and complemented by a longer peak selling period, given the later date of the Lunar New Year compared to last year.', '""Moving forward, the finance chief said the company is expecting mid-single-digit percentage revenue growth the next fiscal year, which he expects will be guided by advances in the direct-to-consumer business.', 'He also said he expects comparable store sales to grow ""somewhere in the low single digits.', '""Bowden said Canada Goose\'s business increase in China and Asia Pacific over the past three months is in line with the view of mid-single-digit growth for the luxury business.', 'North America, however, has been under ""a little bit more pressure,"" he said.', 'This upbeat performance comes after the company announced back in March that it was going to cut 17% of its corporate workforce.', 'Canada Goose reported the layoffs had generated about CA$20 million (US$14.7 million) in productivity improvements and cost savings for the fiscal fourth quarter.']",0.3174784119382864,"Bowden said the growth was supported by domestic shopping on the Chinese mainland, as well as mainland tourists driving ""strong growth"" in Hong Kong and Macao.","North America, however, has been under ""a little bit more pressure,"" he said.",0.8158493746410717,"The broader Asia-Pacific region excluding Greater China was up 29.1%, and North American sales saw an increase of 24.5%.Net income for the fiscal fourth quarter ended March 31 swung to CA$7.6 million, or 5 Canadian cents per share, from a loss of CA$10 million, or 3 Canadian cents per share, in the year-earlier period.","North America, however, has been under ""a little bit more pressure,"" he said.",2024-05-21 "Netflix ad-supported tier has 40 million monthly users, nearly double previous count",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/15/netflix-ad-tier-has-40-million-users.html,2024-05-15T20:49:56+0000,"In this articleNetflix's cheaper, ad-supported tier has amassed 40 million global monthly active users, the company said Wednesday.That's nearly double the 23 million figure the streaming giant shared in January.The company also said it would launch its own advertising platform and no longer partner with Microsoft for that technology. The tech giant will remain a programmatic advertising partner, but will also be joined by other ad tech companies including The Trade Desk, Google Display & Video 360 and Magnite.Netflix will begin testing its ad tech platform in Canada later this year and plans to launch it in the U.S. by the end of the second quarter next year. The company aims to set the platform live everywhere by the end of 2025.The announcements came on Wednesday alongside Netflix's Upfront presentation, designed to woo advertisers. The streaming giant joined its media peers for the second time in making an annual pitch to lock in advertising for its platform.Earlier on Wednesday the company said it reached a deal to stream two National Football League games on Christmas Day this year, and at least one matchup on the same day in both 2025 and 2026.Netflix has the option to host one or two games in future years, with 2024 serving as a test, co-CEO Ted Sarandos told CNBC on Wednesday.It marks Netflix's first real foray into live sports after years of resistance. Sports, particularly the NFL, has proven to be the glue that keeps traditional TV intact — and has also proven to be a boost to streaming services.Terms of the NFL deal were not disclosed, but people familiar with the matter said Netflix will pay in the ballpark of $75 million per game. Spokespeople for the NFL and Netflix declined to comment.The streamer will hire its own announcers for the games and partner with existing production companies. Sarandos told CNBC he felt the NFL was the right fit because it matched the streamer's event strategy, allowing Netflix to effectively own the day.Netflix first introduced its ad-supported subscription plan in November 2022 as part of a wider effort to drive revenue amid slowing subscriber growth. That strategy included last year's password-sharing crackdown.Since then Netflix has been moving at breakneck speed to grow its ad-supported customer base, after admittedly being slow to join the pack. As part of that effort, Netflix got rid of its cheapest commercial-free plan in the U.S. and U.K.The company said Wednesday that 40% of all signups in countries that have the ad tier available are for that cheaper plan. Netflix now has 270 million total subscribers.For comparison, Disney's flagship service Disney+ has 117.6 million global subscribers, while Warner Bros. Discovery's streaming unit, led by Max, has 99.6 million. Those two companies recently announced they would offer a streaming bundle in order to prevent subscribers from dropping subscriptions and help them to make their streaming businesses profitable.Meanwhile, fledgling competitors are adding quarterly subscribers, but still trail. Comcast's Peacock had 34 million customers as of the most recent quarter, while Paramount Global's Paramount+ had 71 million.Netflix's monthly active ad-tier user figures come just a month after Netflix told investors it would no longer be providing quarterly subscriber number updates. The company said at the time that it was generating substantial profit and free cash flow and that its membership numbers were not the only factor in the company's growth. It said the metric lost significance after it started to offer multiple price points for memberships.Meanwhile, linear TV audiences continue to shrink and traditional media companies seek to gain a foothold in the streaming realm.Legacy media companies have suffered in recent quarters as the advertising market collapsed due to fears of a recession and surging interest rates. Companies typically pullback on advertising spending during times of economic uncertainty.But with a long runway ahead of it in the streaming business, Netflix has established itself as the leader in the segment as many other companies struggle to make their streaming platforms profitable.Disney executives recently referred to Netflix as the ""gold standard"" of streaming, and also noted that there's been additional supply in the ad market due to a competitor that recently entered the game, likely referencing Netflix.Media companies recently reported quarterly earnings, which showed the advertising market for traditional TV is still soft, albeit improving. Digital and streaming advertising, however, has been on the rebound.Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.",CNBC,15/05/2024,"[""In this articleNetflix's cheaper, ad-supported tier has amassed 40 million global monthly active users, the company said Wednesday."", ""That's nearly double the 23 million figure the streaming giant shared in January."", 'The company also said it would launch its own advertising platform and no longer partner with Microsoft for that technology.', 'The tech giant will remain a programmatic advertising partner, but will also be joined by other ad tech companies including The Trade Desk, Google Display & Video 360 and Magnite.', 'Netflix will begin testing its ad tech platform in Canada later this year and plans to launch it in the U.S. by the end of the second quarter next year.', ""The company aims to set the platform live everywhere by the end of 2025.The announcements came on Wednesday alongside Netflix's Upfront presentation, designed to woo advertisers."", 'The streaming giant joined its media peers for the second time in making an annual pitch to lock in advertising for its platform.', 'Earlier on Wednesday the company said it reached a deal to stream two National Football League games on Christmas Day this year, and at least one matchup on the same day in both 2025 and 2026.Netflix has the option to host one or two games in future years, with 2024 serving as a test, co-CEO Ted Sarandos told CNBC on Wednesday.', ""It marks Netflix's first real foray into live sports after years of resistance."", 'Sports, particularly the NFL, has proven to be the glue that keeps traditional TV intact — and has also proven to be a boost to streaming services.', 'Terms of the NFL deal were not disclosed, but people familiar with the matter said Netflix will pay in the ballpark of $75 million per game.', 'Spokespeople for the NFL and Netflix declined to comment.', 'The streamer will hire its own announcers for the games and partner with existing production companies.', ""Sarandos told CNBChe felt the NFL was the right fit because it matched the streamer's event strategy, allowing Netflix to effectively own the day."", 'Netflix first introduced its ad-supported subscription plan in November 2022 as part of a wider effort to drive revenueamid slowing subscriber growth.', ""That strategy included last year'spassword-sharing crackdown."", 'Since then Netflix has been moving at breakneck speed to grow its ad-supported customer base, after admittedly being slow to join the pack.', 'As part of that effort, Netflix got rid of its cheapest commercial-free plan in the U.S. and U.K.The company said Wednesday that 40% of all signups in countries that have the ad tier available are for that cheaper plan.', 'Netflix now has 270 million total subscribers.', ""For comparison, Disney's flagship service Disney+ has 117.6 million global subscribers, while Warner Bros. Discovery's streaming unit, led by Max, has 99.6 million."", 'Those two companies recently announced they would offer a streaming bundle in order to prevent subscribers from dropping subscriptions and help them to make their streaming businesses profitable.', 'Meanwhile, fledgling competitors are adding quarterly subscribers, but still trail.', ""Comcast's Peacock had 34 million customers as of the most recent quarter, while Paramount Global's Paramount+ had 71 million."", ""Netflix's monthly active ad-tier user figures come just a month after Netflix told investors it would no longer be providing quarterly subscriber number updates."", ""The company said at the time that it was generating substantial profit and free cash flow and that its membership numbers were not the only factor in the company's growth."", 'It said the metric lost significance after it started to offer multiple price points for memberships.', 'Meanwhile, linear TV audiences continue to shrink and traditional media companies seek to gain a foothold in the streaming realm.', 'Legacy media companies have suffered in recent quarters as the advertising market collapsed due to fears of a recession and surging interest rates.', 'Companies typically pullback on advertising spending during times of economic uncertainty.', 'But with a long runway ahead of it in the streaming business, Netflix has established itself as the leader in the segment as many other companies struggle to make their streaming platforms profitable.', 'Disney executives recently referred to Netflix as the ""gold standard"" of streaming, and also noted that there\'s been additional supply in the ad market due to a competitor that recently entered the game, likely referencing Netflix.', 'Media companies recently reported quarterly earnings, which showed the advertising market for traditional TV is still soft, albeit improving.', 'Digital and streaming advertising, however, has been on the rebound.', 'Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.']",0.183909881741724,The company said at the time that it was generating substantial profit and free cash flow and that its membership numbers were not the only factor in the company's growth.,Legacy media companies have suffered in recent quarters as the advertising market collapsed due to fears of a recession and surging interest rates.,0.5293343976924294,"Sports, particularly the NFL, has proven to be the glue that keeps traditional TV intact — and has also proven to be a boost to streaming services.",Legacy media companies have suffered in recent quarters as the advertising market collapsed due to fears of a recession and surging interest rates.,2024-05-21 Your ultimate guide to the American Express Membership Rewards program,https://edition.cnn.com/cnn-underscored/travel/american-express-membership-rewards-guide," Updated 1:03 PM EDT, Mon April 1, 2024 ","American Express Membership Rewards® are among the most valuable travel rewards points out there. That’s primarily because they fall into the category of “transferable rewards,” meaning you’re not tied down to a single airline or hotel program with which you can redeem them. In other words, you’re not just earning points that can transfer to Delta SkyMiles, but they can also transfer to any of the other 16 airlines in the Membership Rewards portfolio. Having Membership Rewards points gives you options, and that’s always a good thing. If you’re ready to give your rewards portfolio a boost, here’s everything you need to know about earning and redeeming Amex Membership Rewards. You can earn Membership Rewards points in various ways. Some require little effort, while others involve a heavier lift. It’s a good idea to take advantage of all the options out there in order to maximize your earnings. Here’s a look at how to earn Membership Rewards most efficiently. The primary way to earn Amex points is through credit cards that earn Membership Rewards. Amex has an extensive lineup of personal and business cards offering generous welcome bonuses and recurring benefits to help you earn maximum points. These include well-known cards like The Platinum Card® from American Express and the American Express® Gold Card. With a single welcome bonus offer, you can give a pretty substantial boost to your Membership Rewards points balance. Here’s a look at the current welcome bonus offers on personal credit cards that earn Membership Rewards. Keep in mind, too, that many of these cards carry an annual fee: All information about the Amex EveryDay Credit Card, Amex EveryDay Preferred Credit Card and the American Express Green Card has been collected independently by CNN Underscored. Similarly, American Express offers a suite of business credit cards. All information about the Business Green Rewards Card from American Express has been collected independently by CNN Underscored. Keep in mind that several of these cards also carry an annual fee: Beyond the welcome bonus offers available, American Express makes it easy to earn Membership Rewards through category bonuses. If you spend a lot on groceries, it may be worth considering the Amex Gold card to earn 4 points per dollar spent at US supermarkets (on up to $25,000 in purchases per year). If you travel often, the Amex Platinum card is a great option for earning 5 points per dollar spent on eligible bookings made directly with an airline or with Amex Travel. Plus, you’ll have access to airport lounges, like American Express Centurion Lounges and Delta Sky Clubs, among others. When applying for American Express cards, be sure to take note of the application rules. For example, you can’t earn an Amex welcome bonus more than once (with a few exceptions), and you generally won’t be approved for more than two cards every 90 days. Before applying for a credit card, it’s important to do your research. As mentioned before, American Express makes it manageable to earn bonus points long after the welcome bonus offer. One of those ways is by adding an authorized user to your Amex card, which will occasionally earn you bonus points. Aside from the special promotions where Amex will offer you bonus points for adding an authorized user, doing so can also help you double up your point earnings. That’s because you’ll not only earn points per dollar spent on your purchases, but you’ll also earn rewards on the authorized user’s purchases. Of course, you’ll only want to consider adding a member of your household or someone you trust to pay you back as an authorized user on your account. Authorized users can make charges on the credit card they’ve been added to but have no liability when it comes to paying the bill — that onus falls on you, the primary card holder. Choose carefully who you add to your account, and you can earn extra Amex points without lifting a finger. If you’ve picked up an American Express credit card, earned the welcome bonus offer and think others would enjoy doing the same, you can get rewarded for spreading the word to family and friends. American Express offers bonuses to current card holders when you refer someone and they are approved for an eligible card. You can earn up to 20,000 points per successful approval, though the exact bonus varies by card. To find out your card’s current referral bonus, head over to the Amex referral site. You’ll see referral bonuses based on your card. Simply enter your friend’s name and email address for each card you want to refer and they’ll get an email, inviting them to apply for the card. You can also copy the referral link on the page and share that with your friends and family directly. Referrals are a lucrative way to earn Amex Membership Rewards points for recommending credit cards to your friends and family. Keep in mind there is a limit to how many friends you can refer in a year. Booking travel with American Express is rewarding, too — you can earn bonus points on your credit card, plus you can often get additional perks and rewards. For example, with the Amex Platinum, you’ll get 5 points per dollar spent on hotels booked through Amex Travel. As an added incentive, you’ll receive perks like free breakfast for two, room upgrades when available and hotel credits to use at the spa or onsite restaurant just by booking with Fine Hotels & Resorts or the Hotel Collection. In general, booking travel through American Express pays off in more ways than one. Card holders can also utilize one of the most underrated benefits of having an Amex card: Amex Offers. With Amex Offers, card holders can earn statement credits or bonus points at select retailers. In other words, it’s the perfect opportunity to save some cash or earn bonus points for purchases you were already planning on making. To find and take advantage of Amex Offers, you’ll need to log in to your account. From there, scroll to the bottom of the page to the Amex Offers & Benefits section of the page. Be sure to click “View All” to load all of your eligible offers, and also be sure to select “Add to Card” in order to activate your Amex Offer. From there, you’ll be eligible to earn the bonus points or cash savings that come as part of each Amex Offer — so long as you use the registered card to make your purchase. Amex Offers are a massive perk of Amex cards that can save you money or earn you bonus points on purchases you were already planning to make. Thanks to a partnership with American Express, you can turn your Rakuten cash back rewards into Membership Rewards. It’s a great way to earn Membership Rewards points on regular purchases, without much added effort. If you already have a Rakuten account, you can easily switch your earning preference to Membership Rewards. Simply log into your account and follow these steps: After this, rewards get transferred to your Membership Rewards account quarterly. Now, for the fun part! Once you’ve earned Membership Rewards points, it’s time to put them to good use. Amex gives you several options to redeem points, but the best option is travel. You can choose between statement credits for travel bookings or transferring them to airline or hotel partners. Here’s a closer look at your options and how they work. American Express has 20 airline and hotel transfer partners — in other words, the Amex points you’ve earned can be transferred to any of the 20 hotel and airline partners. The best way to redeem Membership Rewards for maximum value is through airline transfers. But keep in mind that not all airline loyalty programs are equal. Ultimately, you’ll want to research which program will offer you the most in return, depending on what your travel plans are. With each of the partners, you’ll need to link your accounts, and you’ll also need to search for award availability with the airline of your choice before transferring any points. If you’re looking to transfer your Amex Membership Rewards points, these are the 20 airline and hotel partner options, as well as the transfer rate. It’s worth noting that Amex occasionally runs transfer promotions for certain airlines or hotels. So, at times, you can get more points in return than the standard transfer rate listed above. Bonuses like these can increase the value of your points by enabling you to book sought-after award tickets for substantially less. By transferring Amex Membership Rewards points to partner airlines, you unlock the ability to travel for next to nothing — in most cases when redeeming points and miles, you’ll just have to pay the taxes and fees on a ticket. As a result, points and miles open up the door for flying experiences that would otherwise be out of reach. Keep in mind that the most obvious airline choice may not always be your best option. Airlines typically have extensive alliance networks, allowing you to redeem points for partner airlines through their respective programs. For example, British Airways and American Airlines are both members of the Oneworld alliance, meaning you can transfer your Amex Membership Rewards points to British Airways Executive Club and redeem for flights operated by American Airlines. Because of the vast number of airline transfer partners, your options are virtually endless for where your Membership Rewards points can take you. But, some redemptions are better than others — particularly when it comes to award sweet spots. Some examples of these sweet spot awards using your Amex Membership Rewards points include the following: Generally speaking, you’ll get the most value out of your Amex Membership Rewards points by transferring them to airline partners. But that may not always make sense for all card holders — and it’s not your only option. If figuring out transfer partner options and award charts sounds daunting, you can also use your Membership Rewards for fixed redemptions. This includes using points for statement credits, travel bookings via Amex Travel, charitable donations, online shopping and gift cards. Using points for statement credits toward qualifying purchases isn’t a great use of your points because you’ll only get 0.6 cents per point in value. If you’re looking to maximize the value of your Amex points, this isn’t the best route to take. You’ll get slightly more value by redeeming your Membership Rewards for travel bookings. By doing so, you’ll get 1 cent per point toward airfare and 0.7 cents per point toward car rentals, hotels, cruises and vacation bookings. Business Platinum card holders also get a 35% rebate when redeeming points for flight bookings through Amex Travel. If you choose to redeem your points for gift cards, you’ll get 1 cent per point in value. However, if you use Pay With Points (valid with Amazon, Best Buy, Boxed, Dell and GrubHub and others), you’ll get a value of just 0.5 cents to 1 cent each (depending on the Amex card) — one of the lowest-value options out there. Generally speaking, you should try to extract as much value as possible out of your Amex Membership Rewards points. However, that’s not always the case for everyone. You may want to save a few dollars here or there on a purchase you’re making online. Ultimately, we love Membership Rewards points so much because you have the option to use them however you like — whether for travel, Amazon purchases, gift cards and more. When it comes to the worth of your Membership Rewards points, it ultimately comes down to how you use them. The value you can get ranges from about 0.6 cents each to about 2 cents each. Frequent flyer website The Points Guy values Amex Membership Rewards points at 2 cents apiece. Amex offers 0.6 cents per point in value when you use points for statement credits. Meanwhile, travel bookings will get you a somewhat higher 1 cent per point. The highest value comes from transferring points to airline and hotel partners, as detailed above. Convert your points to airline miles and you can get 2 cents or more in value on premium award redemptions. American Express Membership Rewards points are some of the most versatile and valuable out there. By earning them, you give yourself the option to save money on travel, buying gift cards, Amazon purchases and so much more. Ultimately, it’s the flexibility that makes having an Amex credit card so rewarding. Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Platinum card.Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Gold card.Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Business Platinum card.Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Business Gold card.Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Blue Business Plus card. Looking for a travel credit card? Find out which cards CNN Underscored Money chose as the best travel credit cards currently available.",CNN,01/04/2024,"['American Express Membership Rewards® are among the most valuable travel rewards points out there.', 'That’s primarily because they fall into the category of “transferable rewards,” meaning you’re not tied down to a single airline or hotel program with which you can redeem them.', 'In other words, you’re not just earning points that can transfer to Delta SkyMiles, but they can also transfer to any of the other 16 airlines in the Membership Rewards portfolio.', 'Having Membership Rewards points gives you options, and that’s always a good thing.', 'If you’re ready to give your rewards portfolio a boost, here’s everything you need to know about earning and redeeming Amex Membership Rewards.', 'You can earn Membership Rewards points in various ways.', 'Some require little effort, while others involve a heavier lift.', 'It’s a good idea to take advantage of all the options out there in order to maximize your earnings.', 'Here’s a look at how to earn Membership Rewards most efficiently.', 'The primary way to earn Amex points is through credit cards that earn Membership Rewards.', 'Amex has an extensive lineup of personal and business cards offering generous welcome bonuses and recurring benefits to help you earn maximum points.', 'These include well-known cards like The Platinum Card® from American Express and the American Express® Gold Card.', 'With a single welcome bonus offer, you can give a pretty substantial boost to your Membership Rewards points balance.', 'Here’s a look at the current welcome bonus offers on personal credit cards that earn Membership Rewards.', 'Keep in mind, too, that many of these cards carry an annual fee: All information about the Amex EveryDay Credit Card, Amex EveryDay Preferred Credit Card and the American Express Green Card has been collected independently by CNN Underscored.', 'Similarly, American Express offers a suite of business credit cards.', 'All information about the Business Green Rewards Card from American Express has been collected independently by CNN Underscored.', 'Keep in mind that several of these cards also carry an annual fee: Beyond the welcome bonus offers available, American Express makes it easy to earn Membership Rewards through category bonuses.', 'If you spend a lot on groceries, it may be worth considering the Amex Gold card to earn 4 points per dollar spent at US supermarkets (on up to $25,000 in purchases per year).', 'If you travel often, the Amex Platinum card is a great option for earning 5 points per dollar spent on eligible bookings made directly with an airline or with Amex Travel.', 'Plus, you’ll have access to airport lounges, like American Express Centurion Lounges and Delta Sky Clubs, among others.', 'When applying for American Express cards, be sure to take note of the application rules.', 'For example, you can’t earn an Amex welcome bonus more than once (with a few exceptions), and you generally won’t be approved for more than two cards every 90 days.', 'Before applying for a credit card, it’s important to do your research.', 'As mentioned before, American Express makes it manageable to earn bonus points long after the welcome bonus offer.', 'One of those ways is by adding an authorized user to your Amex card, which will occasionally earn you bonus points.', 'Aside from the special promotions where Amex will offer you bonus points for adding an authorized user, doing so can also help you double up your point earnings.', 'That’s because you’ll not only earn points per dollar spent on your purchases, but you’ll also earn rewards on the authorized user’s purchases.', 'Of course, you’ll only want to consider adding a member of your household or someone you trust to pay you back as an authorized user on your account.', 'Authorized users can make charges on the credit card they’ve been added to but have no liability when it comes to paying the bill — that onus falls on you, the primary card holder.', 'Choose carefully who you add to your account, and you can earn extra Amex points without lifting a finger.', 'If you’ve picked up an American Express credit card, earned the welcome bonus offer and think others would enjoy doing the same, you can get rewarded for spreading the word to family and friends.', 'American Express offers bonuses to current card holders when you refer someone and they are approved for an eligible card.', 'You can earn up to 20,000 points per successful approval, though the exact bonus varies by card.', 'To find out your card’s current referral bonus, head over to the Amex referral site.', 'You’ll see referral bonuses based on your card.', 'Simply enter your friend’s name and email address for each card you want to refer and they’ll get an email, inviting them to apply for the card.', 'You can also copy the referral link on the page and share that with your friends and family directly.', 'Referrals are a lucrative way to earn Amex Membership Rewards points for recommending credit cards to your friends and family.', 'Keep in mind there is a limit to how many friends you can refer in a year.', 'Booking travel with American Express is rewarding, too — you can earn bonus points on your credit card, plus you can often get additional perks and rewards.', 'For example, with the Amex Platinum, you’ll get 5 points per dollar spent on hotels booked through Amex Travel.', 'As an added incentive, you’ll receive perks like free breakfast for two, room upgrades when available and hotel credits to use at the spa or onsite restaurant just by booking with Fine Hotels & Resorts or the Hotel Collection.', 'In general, booking travel through American Express pays off in more ways than one.', 'Card holders can also utilize one of the most underrated benefits of having an Amex card: Amex Offers.', 'With Amex Offers, card holders can earn statement credits or bonus points at select retailers.', 'In other words, it’s the perfect opportunity to save some cash or earn bonus points for purchases you were already planning on making.', 'To find and take advantage of Amex Offers, you’ll need to log in to your account.', 'From there, scroll to the bottom of the page to the Amex Offers & Benefits section of the page.', 'Be sure to click “View All” to load all of your eligible offers, and also be sure to select “Add to Card” in order to activate your Amex Offer.', 'From there, you’ll be eligible to earn the bonus points or cash savings that come as part of each Amex Offer — so long as you use the registered card to make your purchase.', 'Amex Offers are a massive perk of Amex cards that can save you money or earn you bonus points on purchases you were already planning to make.', 'Thanks to a partnership with American Express, you can turn your Rakuten cash back rewards into Membership Rewards.', 'It’s a great way to earn Membership Rewards points on regular purchases, without much added effort.', 'If you already have a Rakuten account, you can easily switch your earning preference to Membership Rewards.', 'Simply log into your account and follow these steps: After this, rewards get transferred to your Membership Rewards account quarterly.', 'Now, for the fun part!', 'Once you’ve earned Membership Rewards points, it’s time to put them to good use.', 'Amex gives you several options to redeem points, but the best option is travel.', 'You can choose between statement credits for travel bookings or transferring them to airline or hotel partners.', 'Here’s a closer look at your options and how they work.', 'American Express has 20 airline and hotel transfer partners — in other words, the Amex points you’ve earned can be transferred to any of the 20 hotel and airline partners.', 'The best way to redeem Membership Rewards for maximum value is through airline transfers.', 'But keep in mind that not all airline loyalty programs are equal.', 'Ultimately, you’ll want to research which program will offer you the most in return, depending on what your travel plans are.', 'With each of the partners, you’ll need to link your accounts, and you’ll also need to search for award availability with the airline of your choice before transferring any points.', 'If you’re looking to transfer your Amex Membership Rewards points, these are the 20 airline and hotel partner options, as well as the transfer rate.', 'It’s worth noting that Amex occasionally runs transfer promotions for certain airlines or hotels.', 'So, at times, you can get more points in return than the standard transfer rate listed above.', 'Bonuses like these can increase the value of your points by enabling you to book sought-after award tickets for substantially less.', 'By transferring Amex Membership Rewards points to partner airlines, you unlock the ability to travel for next to nothing — in most cases when redeeming points and miles, you’ll just have to pay the taxes and fees on a ticket.', 'As a result, points and miles open up the door for flying experiences that would otherwise be out of reach.', 'Keep in mind that the most obvious airline choice may not always be your best option.', 'Airlines typically have extensive alliance networks, allowing you to redeem points for partner airlines through their respective programs.', 'For example, British Airways and American Airlines are both members of the Oneworld alliance, meaning you can transfer your Amex Membership Rewards points to British Airways Executive Club and redeem for flights operated by American Airlines.', 'Because of the vast number of airline transfer partners, your options are virtually endless for where your Membership Rewards points can take you.', 'But, some redemptions are better than others — particularly when it comes to award sweet spots.', 'Some examples of these sweet spot awards using your Amex Membership Rewards points include the following: Generally speaking, you’ll get the most value out of your Amex Membership Rewards points by transferring them to airline partners.', 'But that may not always make sense for all card holders — and it’s not your only option.', 'If figuring out transfer partner options and award charts sounds daunting, you can also use your Membership Rewards for fixed redemptions.', 'This includes using points for statement credits, travel bookings via Amex Travel, charitable donations, online shopping and gift cards.', 'Using points for statement credits toward qualifying purchases isn’t a great use of your points because you’ll only get 0.6 cents per point in value.', 'If you’re looking to maximize the value of your Amex points, this isn’t the best route to take.', 'You’ll get slightly more value by redeeming your Membership Rewards for travel bookings.', 'By doing so, you’ll get 1 cent per point toward airfare and 0.7 cents per point toward car rentals, hotels, cruises and vacation bookings.', 'Business Platinum card holders also get a 35% rebate when redeeming points for flight bookings through Amex Travel.', 'If you choose to redeem your points for gift cards, you’ll get 1 cent per point in value.', 'However, if you use Pay With Points (valid with Amazon, Best Buy, Boxed, Dell and GrubHub and others), you’ll get a value of just 0.5 cents to 1 cent each (depending on the Amex card) — one of the lowest-value options out there.', 'Generally speaking, you should try to extract as much value as possible out of your Amex Membership Rewards points.', 'However, that’s not always the case for everyone.', 'You may want to save a few dollars here or there on a purchase you’re making online.', 'Ultimately, we love Membership Rewards points so much because you have the option to use them however you like — whether for travel, Amazon purchases, gift cards and more.', 'When it comes to the worth of your Membership Rewards points, it ultimately comes down to how you use them.', 'The value you can get ranges from about 0.6 cents each to about 2 cents each.', 'Frequent flyer website The Points Guy values Amex Membership Rewards points at 2 cents apiece.', 'Amex offers 0.6 cents per point in value when you use points for statement credits.', 'Meanwhile, travel bookings will get you a somewhat higher 1 cent per point.', 'The highest value comes from transferring points to airline and hotel partners, as detailed above.', 'Convert your points to airline miles and you can get 2 cents or more in value on premium award redemptions.', 'American Express Membership Rewards points are some of the most versatile and valuable out there.', 'By earning them, you give yourself the option to save money on travel, buying gift cards, Amazon purchases and so much more.', 'Ultimately, it’s the flexibility that makes having an Amex credit card so rewarding.', 'Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Platinum card.', 'Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Gold card.', 'Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Business Platinum card.', 'Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Business Gold card.', 'Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Blue Business Plus card.', 'Looking for a travel credit card?', 'Find out which cardsCNN Underscored Moneychose as thebest travel credit cardscurrently available.']",0.5246481979610982,"If you’ve picked up an American Express credit card, earned the welcome bonus offer and think others would enjoy doing the same, you can get rewarded for spreading the word to family and friends.",But keep in mind that not all airline loyalty programs are equal.,0.9622429311275482,"With a single welcome bonus offer, you can give a pretty substantial boost to your Membership Rewards points balance.",,2024-05-21 Federal regulators are investigating fatal crash of VinFast EV,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/21/cars/vinfast-regulators-investigating-fatal-crash-ev/index.html," Updated 2:09 PM EDT, Tue May 21, 2024 ","Federal regulators are investigating a California crash that killed four occupants who rode in a VinFast electric SUV, which had automated steering features the owner had earlier complained about. The VinFast VF8, made by the Vietnamese automaker founded in 2017, veered off the road and crashed into a pole and then a tree before catching fire, according to a complaint posted on the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s web site. Someone claiming to be the vehicle’s owner filed the complaint. The SUV was being driven by one of the owner’s coworkers with the coworker’s family when the fatal crash occurred, according to the complaint. The occupants killed included two children in the back seat. The vehicle owner had complained about the performance of the SUV’s automated steering, although it’s not clear if that was a factor in the crash. Earlier, while the owner was driving, the same vehicle had unexpectedly steered to the right, according to the complaint, in at least two instances. In at least one of those cases, the SUV’s automatic driving assistance features, designed to automatically help the vehicle steer within its own lane, were turned on “by default.” The driver was able to regain control, bringing the vehicle back into the proper lane, according to the complaint. “The contact was concerned that the failure recurred while the coworker was driving,” the complaint said. It’s not clear if the vehicle’s Advanced Driving Assistance features were involved in the fatal crash. NHTSA has been investigating numerous incidents involving vehicles from a number of automakers, including Tesla and Ford, in which ADAS systems were in use at the time. Media reports, citing local police, have said that speed was a factor in the crash. NHTSA’s Special Crash Investigations unit, which investigates incidents deemed to be of particular interest due to unusual circumstances or new technologies involved, will “document the crash circumstances and the ensuing fire,” according a statement from the agency. “VinFast and NHTSA are working cooperatively to determine the causes of the tragic crash in Pleasanton. NHTSA is not investigating VinFast,” VinFast said in a statement provided to CNN. “The Pleasanton police are currently investigating the cause of the accident and will share their findings when their work is completed.”",CNN,21/05/2024,"['Federal regulators are investigating a California crash that killed four occupants who rode in a VinFast electric SUV, which had automated steering features the owner had earlier complained about.', 'The VinFast VF8, made by the Vietnamese automaker founded in 2017, veered off the road and crashed into a pole and then a tree before catching fire, according to a complaint posted on the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s web site.', 'Someone claiming to be the vehicle’s owner filed the complaint.', 'The SUV was being driven by one of the owner’s coworkers with the coworker’s family when the fatal crash occurred, according to the complaint.', 'The occupants killed included two children in the back seat.', 'The vehicle owner had complained about the performance of the SUV’s automated steering, although it’s not clear if that was a factor in the crash.', 'Earlier, while the owner was driving, the same vehicle had unexpectedly steered to the right, according to the complaint, in at least two instances.', 'In at least one of those cases, the SUV’s automatic driving assistance features, designed to automatically help the vehicle steer within its own lane, were turned on “by default.”', 'The driver was able to regain control, bringing the vehicle back into the proper lane, according to the complaint.', '“The contact was concerned that the failure recurred while the coworker was driving,” the complaint said.', 'It’s not clear if the vehicle’s Advanced Driving Assistance features were involved in the fatal crash.', 'NHTSA has been investigating numerous incidents involving vehicles from a number of automakers, including Tesla and Ford, in which ADAS systems were in use at the time.', 'Media reports, citing local police, have said that speed was a factor in the crash.', 'NHTSA’s Special Crash Investigations unit, which investigates incidents deemed to be of particular interest due to unusual circumstances or new technologies involved, will “document the crash circumstances and the ensuing fire,” according a statement from the agency.', '“VinFast and NHTSA are working cooperatively to determine the causes of the tragic crash in Pleasanton.', 'NHTSA is not investigating VinFast,” VinFast said in a statement provided to CNN. “', 'The Pleasanton police are currently investigating the cause of the accident and will share their findings when their work is completed.”']",-0.396597053621507,"In at least one of those cases, the SUV’s automatic driving assistance features, designed to automatically help the vehicle steer within its own lane, were turned on “by default.”","Federal regulators are investigating a California crash that killed four occupants who rode in a VinFast electric SUV, which had automated steering features the owner had earlier complained about.",-0.2596213221549988,"The driver was able to regain control, bringing the vehicle back into the proper lane, according to the complaint.","The vehicle owner had complained about the performance of the SUV’s automated steering, although it’s not clear if that was a factor in the crash.",2024-05-21 "Nissan delays shift to EVs at Mississippi factory, postponing five new models",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/21/cars/nissan-evs-mississippi-factory/index.html," Published 3:30 PM EDT, Tue May 21, 2024 ","Nissan is postponing a push to build new electric vehicles at its Canton, Mississippi, factory as sales of EVs are now growing more slowly than many industry experts had expected. EV sales in the US grew 2.6 % in the first quarter of 2024 compared to the same period in 2023, according to Kelley Blue Book. First quarter EV sales last year had outpaced 2022’s by a stunning 46.4%. Many in the industry had expected interest in EVs to accelerate, not slow down. But consumers are concerned about the high prices of EVs and worried about being able to charge them easily, according to the consumer survey company JD Power. These concerns have led to recent drops in customer consideration of EVs. Currently, Nissan sells two EV models in the US, the Leaf compact hatchback and the Ariya SUV, but had announced plans to build five new EV models in Canton including two originally scheduled for production in 2025. The new models were set to include both Nissan and Infiniti vehicles. Infiniti is Nissan’s luxury brand. Nissan is delaying plans to actually begin producing the vehicles in Mississippi. “We are adjusting the timeline for the introduction of these five new models to ensure we bring the vehicles to the market at the right time, prioritizing in line with customer demand and maximizing the opportunity for our brands and supplier partners,” Nissan said in a statement emailed to CNN. These latest delays were previously reported by the industry newspaper Automotive News. Nissan still plans to offer a total of 19 EV models globally by 2030, a spokesperson said. Nissan previously announced it would invest $500 million in the factory to prepare it build the new electric vehicles. The factory in Canton currently employs roughly 5,000 workers and makes the Nissan Altima sedan Frontier, Titan, and Titan XD pickups. Other automakers have also made moves to slow production of new EVs and EV batteries citing concerns about slowing consumer adoption. Last year, GM slowed down a planned ramp up in production of its Silverado EV pickup. Ford also reduced the planned size of a factory it’s building to make EV batteries.",CNN,21/05/2024,"['Nissan is postponing a push to build new electric vehicles at its Canton, Mississippi, factory as sales of EVs are now growing more slowly than many industry experts had expected.', 'EV sales in the US grew 2.6 % in the first quarter of 2024 compared to the same period in 2023, according to Kelley Blue Book.', 'First quarter EV sales last year had outpaced 2022’s by a stunning 46.4%.', 'Many in the industry had expected interest in EVs to accelerate, not slow down.', 'But consumers are concerned about the high prices of EVs and worried about being able to charge them easily, according to the consumer survey company JD Power.', 'These concerns have led to recent drops in customer consideration of EVs.', 'Currently, Nissan sells two EV models in the US, the Leaf compact hatchback and the Ariya SUV, but had announced plans to build five new EV models in Canton including two originally scheduled for production in 2025.', 'The new models were set to include both Nissan and Infiniti vehicles.', 'Infiniti is Nissan’s luxury brand.', 'Nissan is delaying plans to actually begin producing the vehicles in Mississippi.', '“We are adjusting the timeline for the introduction of these five new models to ensure we bring the vehicles to the market at the right time, prioritizing in line with customer demand and maximizing the opportunity for our brands and supplier partners,” Nissan said in a statement emailed to CNN.', 'These latest delays were previously reported by the industry newspaper Automotive News.', 'Nissan still plans to offer a total of 19 EV models globally by 2030, a spokesperson said.', 'Nissan previously announced it would invest $500 million in the factory to prepare it build the new electric vehicles.', 'The factory in Canton currently employs roughly 5,000 workers and makes the Nissan Altima sedan Frontier, Titan, and Titan XD pickups.', 'Other automakers have also made moves to slow production of new EVs and EV batteries citing concerns about slowing consumer adoption.', 'Last year, GM slowed down a planned ramp up in production of its Silverado EV pickup.', 'Ford also reduced the planned size of a factory it’s building to make EV batteries.']",0.1245977420979721,"The factory in Canton currently employs roughly 5,000 workers and makes the Nissan Altima sedan Frontier, Titan, and Titan XD pickups.",,0.0782069726423783,"EV sales in the US grew 2.6 % in the first quarter of 2024 compared to the same period in 2023, according to Kelley Blue Book.",These concerns have led to recent drops in customer consideration of EVs.,2024-05-21 Paula Vennells: Five questions for the ex-Post Office boss,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cg33yjdpn0qo,2024-05-20T23:12:36.155Z,"The former boss of the Post Office, Paula Vennells, is giving evidence on Wednesday at the public inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal. It is a major investigation into how hundreds of sub-postmasters were wrongly prosecuted starting in 1999 after faulty software said money was missing from Post Office branch accounts. Ms Vennells was chief executive from 2012 to 2019. During this time, sub-postmasters were still being prosecuted but the Post Office continued to deny the faulty Horizon software was to blame, despite mounting evidence of wrongful convictions. This will be the first time Ms Vennells has spoken publicly about what happened in almost a decade. She will be grilled for three days. So, what are some of the key questions she has to answer? The Post Office always claimed sub-postmasters' branch accounts could not be remotely accessed without their knowledge. Prosecutions were done on the basis that the accounts were secure. Once it became known that Fujitsu, the company responsible for the Horizon system, was able to do this, it undermined every prosecution case and civil claim the Post Office had brought. We now know that the Post Office was made aware as early as 2010 about this secret “back door” access. We also know that in 2015, Paula Vennells wrote a memo to colleagues saying she needed to be able to say, “No, this isn’t possible.” At the time, she was preparing for an important appearance in front of MPs, as the pressure grew for the Post Office to come clean about the scale of the problems. So when exactly did she know the truth about remote access? Paula Vennells went on to tell MPs on the business select committee in 2015 that she had seen no evidence of any miscarriages of justice. But two years earlier barrister Simon Clarke warned the Post Office there were problems with past prosecutions. He said this was because they’d relied on evidence from Gareth Jenkins, the Fujitsu IT engineer who failed to disclose to the courts that he knew about bugs in the system. Mr Clarke wrote that this left the Post Office in breach of its duty as prosecutor. Lord Arbuthnot, one of the leading campaigners for the sub-postmasters, says Ms Vennells must have known about the advice. “It does make you wonder what reassurances, if any, had she been given, and by whom, before she said what she said on public record.” When Ms Vennells, who was also a part-time Anglican priest, became chief executive, the business was haemorrhaging money. She was under pressure to modernise the business and make it profitable. Horizon was too big and important to fail. Nick Wallis, author of the Great Post Office Scandal, believes Ms Vennells didn’t want to be given bad information. “I think she relied on Post Office loyalists and highly paid legal advisers to tell her the truth she wanted to hear.” It's clear there were plenty of missed opportunities along the way. In 2012, under pressure from sub-postmasters and MPs, forensic accountants Second Sight were appointed to look into the growing number of complaints. Second Sight played a key role in exposing the scandal, finding flaws in the Horizon computer system but Post Office bosses secretly decided in April 2014 to sack the firm, documents obtained by the BBC showed. Ms Vennells defended the Horizon system right to the end. After a mediation scheme to help victims collapsed, sub-postmasters launched an epic High Court battle to get to the truth. This was the fight for justice launched in 2017 by Alan Bates and a group of 555 sub-postmasters which inspired ITV drama Mr Bates vs The Post Office. Ms Vennells was in charge when the Post Office decided to defend the action, going on to spend £100m fighting the group in court despite knowing its defence was untrue, a draft report uncovered by the BBC showed. The Post Office said it would be ""inappropriate"" to comment on this report. “They doubled down, rather than accept the reality,” says Paul Marshall, a barrister who represented several wrongly convicted branch managers. Ms Vennells left the Post Office just before the damning judgement came through. There’s one key bit of context to all this. The Post Office is owned by the government, which has a representative on its board. There’s an awful lot we don’t know about what went on between ministers, top civil servants and the decision making during her leadership, a crucial phase when the alleged cover-up was in full swing. How much did she tell them about the faults and the problems? And what were they telling her? Did Fujitsu mislead her? Everyone touched by this terrible scandal now wants to hear the truth from Ms Vennells. In a statement from her solicitors she said: ""I am truly sorry for the devastation caused to the sub-postmasters and their families, whose lives were torn apart by being wrongly accused and wrongly prosecuted as a result of the Horizon system."" She added: ""I now intend to continue to focus on assisting the inquiry and will not make any further public comment until it has concluded."" ",BBC,20/05/2024,"['The former boss of the Post Office, Paula Vennells, is giving evidence on Wednesday at the public inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal.', 'It is a major investigation into how hundreds of sub-postmasters were wrongly prosecuted starting in 1999 after faulty software said money was missing from Post Office branch accounts.', 'Ms Vennells was chief executive from 2012 to 2019.', 'During this time, sub-postmasters were still being prosecuted but the Post Office continued to deny the faulty Horizon software was to blame, despite mounting evidence of wrongful convictions.', 'This will be the first time Ms Vennells has spoken publicly about what happened in almost a decade.', 'She will be grilled for three days.', 'So, what are some of the key questions she has to answer?', ""The Post Office always claimed sub-postmasters' branch accounts could not be remotely accessed without their knowledge."", 'Prosecutions were done on the basis that the accounts were secure.', 'Once it became known that Fujitsu, the company responsible for the Horizon system, was able to do this, it undermined every prosecution case and civil claim the Post Office had brought.', 'We now know that the Post Office was made aware as early as 2010 about this secret “back door” access.', 'We also know that in 2015, Paula Vennells wrote a memo to colleagues saying she needed to be able to say, “No, this isn’t possible.”', 'At the time, she was preparing for an important appearance in front of MPs, as the pressure grew for the Post Office to come clean about the scale of the problems.', 'So when exactly did she know the truth about remote access?', 'Paula Vennells went on to tell MPs on the business select committee in 2015 that she had seen no evidence of any miscarriages of justice.', 'But two years earlier barrister Simon Clarke warned the Post Office there were problems with past prosecutions.', 'He said this was because they’d relied on evidence from Gareth Jenkins, the Fujitsu IT engineer who failed to disclose to the courts that he knew about bugs in the system.', 'Mr Clarke wrote that this left the Post Office in breach of its duty as prosecutor.', 'Lord Arbuthnot, one of the leading campaigners for the sub-postmasters, says Ms Vennells must have known about the advice. “', 'It does make you wonder what reassurances, if any, had she been given, and by whom, before she said what she said on public record.”', 'When Ms Vennells, who was also a part-time Anglican priest, became chief executive, the business was haemorrhaging money.', 'She was under pressure to modernise the business and make it profitable.', 'Horizon was too big and important to fail.', 'Nick Wallis, author of the Great Post Office Scandal, believes Ms Vennells didn’t want to be given bad information. “', 'I think she relied on Post Office loyalists and highly paid legal advisers to tell her the truth she wanted to hear.”', ""It's clear there were plenty of missed opportunities along the way."", 'In 2012, under pressure from sub-postmasters and MPs, forensic accountants Second Sight were appointed to look into the growing number of complaints.', 'Second Sight played a key role in exposing the scandal, finding flaws in the Horizon computer system but Post Office bosses secretly decided in April 2014 to sack the firm, documents obtained by the BBC showed.', 'Ms Vennells defended the Horizon system right to the end.', 'After a mediation scheme to help victims collapsed, sub-postmasters launched an epic High Court battle to get to the truth.', 'This was the fight for justice launched in 2017 by Alan Bates and a group of 555 sub-postmasters which inspired ITV drama Mr Bates vs The Post Office.', 'Ms Vennells was in charge when the Post Office decided to defend the action, going on to spend £100m fighting the group in court despite knowing its defence was untrue, a draft report uncovered by the BBC showed.', 'The Post Office said it would be ""inappropriate"" to comment on this report. “', 'They doubled down, rather than accept the reality,” says Paul Marshall, a barrister who represented several wrongly convicted branch managers.', 'Ms Vennells left the Post Office just before the damning judgement came through.', 'There’s one key bit of context to all this.', 'The Post Office is owned by the government, which has a representative on its board.', 'There’s an awful lot we don’t know about what went on between ministers, top civil servants and the decision making during her leadership, a crucial phase when the alleged cover-up was in full swing.', 'How much did she tell them about the faults and the problems?', 'And what were they telling her?', 'Did Fujitsu mislead her?', 'Everyone touched by this terrible scandal now wants to hear the truth from Ms Vennells.', 'In a statement from her solicitors she said: ""I am truly sorry for the devastation caused to the sub-postmasters and their families, whose lives were torn apart by being wrongly accused and wrongly prosecuted as a result of the Horizon system.""', 'She added: ""I now intend to continue to focus on assisting the inquiry and will not make any further public comment until it has concluded.""']",-0.1080045020967967,This was the fight for justice launched in 2017 by Alan Bates and a group of 555 sub-postmasters which inspired ITV drama Mr Bates vs The Post Office.,"During this time, sub-postmasters were still being prosecuted but the Post Office continued to deny the faulty Horizon software was to blame, despite mounting evidence of wrongful convictions.",-0.6690008640289307,She was under pressure to modernise the business and make it profitable.,But two years earlier barrister Simon Clarke warned the Post Office there were problems with past prosecutions.,2024-05-21 Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama vote against UAW union membership,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/17/uaw-vote-mercedes-benz-alabama.html,2024-05-17T21:24:27+0000,"Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama have voted against union representation by the United Auto Workers, the National Labor Relations Board said Friday.The results are a blow to the UAW's organizing efforts a month after the Detroit union won an organizing drive of roughly 4,330 Volkswagen plant workers in Tennessee. Voting started Monday and ended Friday.Union organizing failed with 56% of the vote, or 2,642 workers, casting ballots against the UAW, according to the NLRB, which oversaw the election. More than 90% of the 5,075 eligible Mercedes-Benz workers voted in the election, according to the results.The NLRB said 51 ballots were challenged and not counted, but they aren't determinative to the outcome of the election. There were five void ballots. The union and company have five business days to file objections to the election, including any alleged interference, according to the NLRB. If no objections are filed, the election result will be certified, and the union will have to wait one year to file for a union election for a similar bargaining unit.Mercedes-Benz in a statement said company officials ""look forward to continuing to work directly with our Team Members to ensure [Mercedes-Benz US International] is not only their employer of choice, but a place they would recommend to friends and family.""The loss is expected to hurt the UAW in an unprecedented organizing drive launched late last year of 13 non-union automakers in the U.S. after securing record contracts with Detroit automakers Ford Motor, General Motors and Stellantis. Those agreements included significant wage increase, reinstatement of cost-of-living adjustments and other benefits.UAW President Shawn Fain said while the Mercedes-Benz vote was obviously not the result the union wanted, it was a valiant effort, adding the vote ""isn't a failure"" but a ""bump in the road.""""While this loss stings, I'll tell you this, we're going to keep our heads up, keep our heads up high. These workers have nothing to do but be proud in the effort they put forth and what they've done,"" he said Friday during a media conference. ""We fought the good fight and we're going to continue on, continue forward. Ultimately, these workers here are going to win.""The Mercedes-Benz vote was expected to be more challenging for the union than the Volkswagen plant in Tennessee, where the union had already established a presence after two failed organizing drives in the past decade and where it faced less opposition from the automaker.Stephen Silvia, author of ""The UAW's Southern Gamble: Organizing Workers at Foreign-Owned Vehicle Plants,"" noted Mercedes-Benz replaced the plant's leader weeks ahead of the election. He said companies routinely do this, promising workers changes at their facilities in an effort to stave of organizing.""Companies do anti-union campaigns because they can be effective, and I think this one was effective,"" said Silvia, a professor at American University in Washington, D.C. ""A common piece of an anti-union campaign is firing the plant manager ... That seems to have persuaded enough of the workers to vote against the union.""Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey, who was one of six Republican governors to condemn the union's organizing drive, hailed the outcome of the vote.""The workers in Vance have spoken, and they have spoken clearly! Alabama is not Michigan, and we are not the Sweet Home to the UAW. We urge the UAW to respect the results of this secret ballot election,"" she said.Workers at Mercedes-Benz's Tuscaloosa plant, located about 60 miles southwest of Birmingham, have produced more than 4 million vehicles since the plant opened in 1997, including 295,000 vehicles in 2023, according to the plant's website.The Alabama plant currently produces vehicles such as the gas-powered GLE and GLS Maybach SUVs as well as the all-electric EQS and EQE SUVs.The NLRB last week said it continues to process and investigate open unfair labor practice charges filed by the UAW against automakers, including six unfair labor practice charges against Mercedes-Benz since March.Fain said Friday the union would continue to move forward with those charges. He declined to say whether the union plans to challenge the election results, saying he'd ""leave that"" to the union's legal team.The charges allege that Mercedes-Benz has ""disciplined employees for discussing unionization at work, prohibited distribution of union materials and paraphernalia, surveilled employees, discharged union supporters, forced employees to attend captive audience meetings, and made statements suggesting that union activity is futile,"" the NLRB said.The union has filed other charges against automakers Honda, Hyundai, Lucid, Rivian, Tesla and Toyota, according to the NLRB.",CNBC,17/05/2024,"['Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama have voted against union representation by the United Auto Workers, the National Labor Relations Board said Friday.', ""The results are a blow to the UAW's organizing efforts a month after the Detroit union won an organizing drive of roughly 4,330 Volkswagen plant workers in Tennessee."", 'Voting started Monday and ended Friday.', 'Union organizing failed with 56% of the vote, or 2,642 workers, casting ballots against the UAW, according to the NLRB, which oversaw the election.', 'More than 90% of the 5,075 eligible Mercedes-Benz workers voted in the election, according to the results.', ""The NLRB said 51 ballots were challenged and not counted, but they aren't determinative to the outcome of the election."", 'There were five void ballots.', 'The union and company have five business days to file objections to the election, including any alleged interference, accordingto the NLRB.', 'If no objections are filed, the election result will be certified, and the union will have to wait one year to file for a union election for a similar bargaining unit.', 'Mercedes-Benz in a statement said company officials ""look forward to continuing to work directly with our Team Members to ensure [Mercedes-Benz US International] is not only their employer of choice, but a place they would recommend to friends and family.', '""The loss is expected to hurt the UAW in an unprecedented organizing drive launched late last year of 13 non-union automakers in the U.S. after securing record contracts with Detroit automakers Ford Motor, General Motors and Stellantis.', 'Those agreements included significant wage increase, reinstatement of cost-of-living adjustments and other benefits.', 'UAW President Shawn Fain said while the Mercedes-Benz vote was obviously not the result the union wanted, it was a valiant effort, adding the vote ""isn\'t a failure"" but a ""bump in the road.', '""""While this loss stings, I\'ll tell you this, we\'re going to keep our heads up, keep our heads up high.', 'These workers have nothing to do but be proud in the effort they put forth and what they\'ve done,"" he said Friday during a media conference. ""', ""We fought the good fight and we're going to continue on, continue forward."", 'Ultimately, these workers here are going to win.', '""The Mercedes-Benz vote was expected to be more challenging for the union than the Volkswagen plant in Tennessee, where the union had already established a presence after two failed organizing drives in the past decade and where it faced less opposition from the automaker.', 'Stephen Silvia,authorof ""The UAW\'s Southern Gamble: Organizing Workers at Foreign-Owned Vehicle Plants,"" noted Mercedes-Benz replaced the plant\'s leader weeks ahead of the election.', 'He said companies routinely do this, promising workers changes at their facilities in an effort to stave of organizing.', '""Companies do anti-union campaigns because they can be effective, and I think this one was effective,"" said Silvia, a professor at American University in Washington, D.C. ""A common piece of an anti-union campaign is firing the plant manager ... That seems to have persuaded enough of the workers to vote against the union.', '""Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey, who was one of six Republican governors to condemn the union\'s organizing drive, hailed the outcome of the vote.', '""The workers in Vance have spoken, and they have spoken clearly!', 'Alabama is not Michigan, and we are not the Sweet Home to the UAW.', 'We urge the UAW to respect the results of this secret ballot election,"" she said.', ""Workers at Mercedes-Benz's Tuscaloosa plant, located about 60 miles southwest of Birmingham, have produced more than 4 million vehicles since the plant opened in 1997, including 295,000 vehicles in 2023, according to the plant's website."", 'The Alabama plant currently produces vehicles such as the gas-powered GLE and GLS Maybach SUVs as well as the all-electric EQS and EQE SUVs.', 'The NLRB last week said it continues to process and investigate open unfair labor practice charges filed by the UAW against automakers, including six unfair labor practice charges against Mercedes-Benz since March.', 'Fain said Friday the union would continue to move forward with those charges.', 'He declined to say whether the union plans to challenge the election results, saying he\'d ""leave that"" to the union\'s legal team.', 'The charges allege that Mercedes-Benz has ""disciplined employees for discussing unionization at work, prohibited distribution of union materials and paraphernalia, surveilled employees, discharged union supporters, forced employees to attend captive audience meetings, and made statements suggesting that union activity is futile,"" the NLRB said.', 'The union has filed other charges against automakers Honda, Hyundai, Lucid, Rivian, Tesla and Toyota, according to the NLRB.']",0.0311893796263664,"Mercedes-Benz in a statement said company officials ""look forward to continuing to work directly with our Team Members to ensure [Mercedes-Benz US International] is not only their employer of choice, but a place they would recommend to friends and family.","The NLRB last week said it continues to process and investigate open unfair labor practice charges filed by the UAW against automakers, including six unfair labor practice charges against Mercedes-Benz since March.",0.2721788287162781,"Those agreements included significant wage increase, reinstatement of cost-of-living adjustments and other benefits.","""The loss is expected to hurt the UAW in an unprecedented organizing drive launched late last year of 13 non-union automakers in the U.S. after securing record contracts with Detroit automakers Ford Motor, General Motors and Stellantis.",2024-05-21 Walmart says more diners are buying its groceries as fast food gets pricey,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/walmart-earnings-grocery-sales-rise-as-fast-food-prices-increases.html,2024-05-16T17:51:10+0000,"In this articleForget the drive-thru. Walmart wants diners to find a value meal in its grocery aisles.As fast food gets pricier, the nation's largest grocer sees a sales opportunity.On a call with CNBC on Thursday, Walmart Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey said some of the discounter's sales growth in the recent quarter came from customers who turned to its grocery aisles for cheaper meals than they can get at quick-service restaurants.""It's roughly 4.3 times more expensive to eat out than it is to eat at home,"" he said. ""And that's benefiting our business.""As customers see some grocery items stay the same price or even become cheaper, the gap between buying menu items and cooking food at home has grown even wider, he said.Walmart's stock soared to an all-time high Thursday, after it beat Wall Street's quarterly sales and revenue expectations and said it expected its full-year results to be on the high end of, or better than, its previous forecast. Transactions in the U.S. rose 3.8%, as more customers visited its stores and website.Walmart's strong store traffic and quarterly results are at odds with those of restaurant companies, including McDonald's, Starbucks and Yum Brands. Foot traffic to limited-service chains, which includes fast-food and fast-casual restaurants, fell 3.5% in the first quarter, according to Revenue Management Solutions. Restaurant executives blamed bad weather in January and February — and a consumer slowdown, particularly among lower-income diners.Like many restaurants, McDonald's has faced backlash to its prices. An $18 Big Mac combo sold at one of its franchised restaurants in Connecticut went viral on social media, prompting executives to defend the chain's pricing on its conference call. The burger giant reported disappointing U.S. same-store sales growth of 2.5%, suggesting that its foot traffic fell during the quarter.Still, McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinski said consumers, particularly those earning lower incomes, are hunting for deals. The chain will offer a $5 value meal starting June 25 for roughly a month.Not all restaurants have had trouble getting diners to pay higher prices: fast-casual chains such as Chipotle, Wingstop and Sweetgreen all reported strong sales in their most recent quarters.Inflation data from the U.S. Labor Department reflects the difference between the price that customers pay for food they cook at home or pack for lunch, compared with what they pay at a coffee shop or restaurant. As of April, the price of food at home, a category that measures the total cost of food purchased at grocers or other food stores, was up 1.1% year over year. The price of food away from home rose significantly more: 4.1% year over year.On the company's earnings call Thursday, Walmart U.S. CEO John Furner pointed to a newer tool in Walmart's arsenal that it can use to compete more aggressively with restaurants: its new grocery brand, Bettergoods.The premium line includes unique flavors and merchandise tailored for more health-conscious customers or ones with a special diet, such as gluten-free or plant-based items. For example, it includes strawberries and cream-flavored Greek yogurt, curry chicken empanadas, restaurant-style chicken wings and salted caramel oat milk ice cream.Seventy percent of the brand's items are under $5, Furner said — a price point that may catch the eye of shoppers ""trying to feed a family of four, five, [or] six.""— CNBC's Amelia Lucas contributed to this report.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"['In this articleForget the drive-thru.', 'Walmart wants diners to find a value meal in its grocery aisles.', ""As fast food gets pricier, the nation's largest grocer sees a sales opportunity."", ""On a call with CNBC on Thursday, Walmart Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey said some of the discounter's sales growth in the recent quarter came from customers who turned to its grocery aisles for cheaper meals than they can get at quick-service restaurants."", '""It\'s roughly 4.3 times more expensive to eat out than it is to eat at home,"" he said. ""', ""And that's benefiting our business."", '""As customers see some grocery items stay the same price or even become cheaper, the gap between buying menu items and cooking food at home has grown even wider, he said.', ""Walmart's stock soared to an all-time high Thursday, after it beat Wall Street's quarterly sales and revenue expectations and said it expected its full-year results to be on the high end of, or better than, its previous forecast."", 'Transactions in the U.S. rose 3.8%, as more customers visited its stores and website.', ""Walmart's strong store traffic and quarterly results are at odds with those of restaurant companies, including McDonald's, Starbucks and Yum Brands."", 'Foot traffic to limited-service chains, which includes fast-food and fast-casual restaurants, fell 3.5% in the first quarter, according to Revenue Management Solutions.', 'Restaurant executives blamed bad weather in January and February — and a consumer slowdown, particularly among lower-income diners.', ""Like many restaurants, McDonald's has faced backlash to its prices."", ""An $18 Big Mac combo sold at one of its franchised restaurants in Connecticut went viral on social media, prompting executives to defend the chain's pricing on its conference call."", 'The burger giant reported disappointing U.S. same-store sales growth of 2.5%, suggesting that its foot traffic fell during the quarter.', ""Still, McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinski said consumers, particularly those earning lower incomes, are hunting for deals."", 'The chain will offer a $5 value meal starting June 25 for roughly a month.', 'Not all restaurants have had trouble getting diners to pay higher prices: fast-casual chains such as Chipotle, Wingstop and Sweetgreen all reported strong sales in their most recent quarters.', 'Inflation data from the U.S. Labor Departmentreflects the differencebetween the price that customers pay for food they cook at home or pack for lunch, compared with what they pay at a coffee shop or restaurant.', 'As of April, the price of food at home, a category that measures the total cost of food purchased at grocers or other food stores, was up 1.1% year over year.', 'The price of food away from home rose significantly more: 4.1% year over year.', ""On the company's earnings call Thursday, Walmart U.S. CEO John Furner pointed to a newer tool in Walmart's arsenal that it can use to compete more aggressively with restaurants: its new grocery brand, Bettergoods."", 'The premium line includes unique flavors and merchandise tailored for more health-conscious customers or ones with a special diet, such as gluten-free or plant-based items.', 'For example, it includes strawberries and cream-flavored Greek yogurt, curry chicken empanadas, restaurant-style chicken wings and salted caramel oat milk ice cream.', 'Seventy percent of the brand\'s items are under $5, Furner said — a price point that may catch the eye of shoppers ""trying to feed a family of four, five, [or] six.""—', ""CNBC's Amelia Lucas contributed to this report.""]",0.0763173193155215,"The premium line includes unique flavors and merchandise tailored for more health-conscious customers or ones with a special diet, such as gluten-free or plant-based items.","Restaurant executives blamed bad weather in January and February — and a consumer slowdown, particularly among lower-income diners.",0.3580176420509815,"Transactions in the U.S. rose 3.8%, as more customers visited its stores and website.","Foot traffic to limited-service chains, which includes fast-food and fast-casual restaurants, fell 3.5% in the first quarter, according to Revenue Management Solutions.",2024-05-21 Shares of Hims & Hers Health surge 27% after startup says it will offer GLP-1 injections,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/20/hims-hers-compounded-glp-1-injections.html,2024-05-20T20:00:24+0000,"In this articleDigital pharmacy startup Hims & Hers Health is introducing access to compounded GLP-1 weight loss injections, the company announced Monday.Shares of the company closed up more than 27% Monday.The company, which offers a range of direct-to-consumer treatments for conditions like erectile dysfunction and hair loss, launched a weight loss program in December. But GLP-1 medications — such as Ozempic and Wegovy, which have skyrocketed in popularity — were not previously offered as part of that program.Customers can access the compounded GLP-1 medications via a prescription from a licensed health-care provider on the Hims & Hers platform. Hims & Hers said it plans to make branded GLP-1 medications available to its customers once supply is consistently available.The company's oral medication kits start at $79 a month, and its compounded GLP-1 injections will start at $199 a month.Even before it added compounded GLP-1s to its portfolio, Hims & Hers said in its fourth-quarter earnings report that it expects its weight loss program to bring in more than $100 million in revenue by the end of 2025. The company plans to offer updated guidance in its next earnings report.The GLP-1 market, dominated so far by pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk, has faced supply constraints in recent months as the drugs get expanded approval from health regulators and increased health coverage.GLP-1s mimic a hormone produced in the gut to tamp down a person's appetite and regulate their blood sugar. When those medications are in shortage, certain manufacturers can prepare a compounded version if they meet U.S. Food and Drug Administration requirements.The FDA does not review the safety and efficacy of compounded products, which are custom-made alternatives to brand drugs designed to meet a specific patient's needs.In a January release, the FDA said patients should not use a compounded GLP-1 drug if an approved drug, such as Wegovy, is available.Hims & Hers CEO Andrew Dudum told CNBC that the company is ""confident"" that customers will be able to access a consistent supply of the compounded medications.Dudum said Hims & Hers has spent the last year learning about the GLP-1 supply chain and has partnered with one of the largest generic manufacturers in the country that has FDA oversight.""We have a certain degree of exclusivity with that facility that will guarantee our consumers consistent volume and supply,"" he said.",CNBC,20/05/2024,"['In this articleDigital pharmacy startup Hims & Hers Health is introducing access to compounded GLP-1 weight loss injections, the company announced Monday.', 'Shares of the company closed up more than 27% Monday.', 'The company, which offers a range of direct-to-consumer treatments for conditions like erectile dysfunction and hair loss, launched a weight loss program in December.', 'But GLP-1 medications — such as Ozempic and Wegovy, which have skyrocketed in popularity — were not previously offered as part of that program.', 'Customers can access the compounded GLP-1 medications via a prescription from a licensed health-care provider on the Hims & Hers platform.', 'Hims & Hers said it plans to make branded GLP-1 medications available to its customers once supply is consistently available.', ""The company's oral medication kits start at $79 a month, and its compounded GLP-1 injections will start at $199 a month."", 'Even before it added compounded GLP-1s to its portfolio, Hims & Hers said in its fourth-quarter earnings report that it expects its weight loss program to bring in more than $100 million in revenue by the end of 2025.', 'The company plans to offer updated guidance in its next earnings report.', 'The GLP-1 market, dominated so far by pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk, has faced supply constraints in recent months as the drugs get expanded approval from health regulators and increased health coverage.', ""GLP-1s mimic a hormone produced in the gut to tamp down a person's appetite and regulate their blood sugar."", 'When those medications are in shortage, certain manufacturers can prepare a compounded version if they meet U.S. Food and Drug Administration requirements.', ""The FDA does not review the safety and efficacy of compounded products, which are custom-made alternatives to brand drugs designed to meet a specific patient's needs."", 'In a January release, the FDA said patients should not use a compounded GLP-1 drug if an approved drug, such as Wegovy, is available.', 'Hims & Hers CEO Andrew Dudum told CNBC that the company is ""confident"" that customers will be able to access a consistent supply of the compounded medications.', 'Dudum said Hims & Hers has spent the last year learning about the GLP-1 supply chain and has partnered with one of the largest generic manufacturers in the country that has FDA oversight.', '""We have a certain degree of exclusivity with that facility that will guarantee our consumers consistent volume and supply,"" he said.']",0.1168976892509908,"The GLP-1 market, dominated so far by pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk, has faced supply constraints in recent months as the drugs get expanded approval from health regulators and increased health coverage.","The company, which offers a range of direct-to-consumer treatments for conditions like erectile dysfunction and hair loss, launched a weight loss program in December.",0.5591075778007507,"Hims & Hers CEO Andrew Dudum told CNBC that the company is ""confident"" that customers will be able to access a consistent supply of the compounded medications.","The GLP-1 market, dominated so far by pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk, has faced supply constraints in recent months as the drugs get expanded approval from health regulators and increased health coverage.",2024-05-21 Boeing shareholders re-elect departing CEO Calhoun to board,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/17/boeing-calhoun-reelected-shareholder-vote.html,2024-05-17T16:46:44+0000,"In this articleBoeing shareholders voted to re-elect the outgoing CEO Dave Calhoun to the board of directors, a preliminary tally on Friday showed, as he sought to reassure investors that the manufacturer is on the path to stability amid its latest safety crisis.Calhoun in March said he will step down by year's end, months after a door plug panel blew out midflight from a Boeing 737 Max 9, ushering in new scrutiny of the manufacturer's safety and quality control issues. Boeing also replaced its board chair and the head of its commercial airplane unit in the shakeup.Boeing's new chairman, Steve Mollenkopf, told shareholders at the company's annual meeting Friday that he has consulted with investors and customers on Calhoun's successor. Proxy advisor Glass Lewis had recommended that shareholders vote against Calhoun and two other board members.Boeing's latest problems have driven down deliveries of new aircraft, frustrating airline executives who have complained about having to change their flight schedules and scale back staffing. It has also further strained Boeing's relationship with its regulator, the Federal Aviation Administration, which has ramped up inspections of the manufacturer.Earlier this week, the Justice Department said Boeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected the company from criminal charges tied to the two fatal 737 Max crashes, opening Boeing up to potential U.S. prosecution.",CNBC,17/05/2024,"['In this articleBoeing shareholders voted to re-elect the outgoing CEO Dave Calhoun to the board of directors, a preliminary tally on Friday showed, as he sought to reassure investors that the manufacturer is on the path to stability amid its latest safety crisis.', ""Calhoun in March said he will step down by year's end, months after a door plug panel blew out midflight from a Boeing 737 Max 9, ushering in new scrutiny of the manufacturer's safety and quality control issues."", 'Boeing also replaced its board chair and the head of its commercial airplane unit in the shakeup.', ""Boeing's new chairman, Steve Mollenkopf, told shareholders at the company's annual meeting Friday that he has consulted with investors and customers on Calhoun's successor."", 'Proxy advisor Glass Lewis had recommended that shareholders vote against Calhoun and two other board members.', ""Boeing's latest problems have driven down deliveries of new aircraft, frustrating airline executives who have complained about having to change their flight schedules and scale back staffing."", ""It has also further strained Boeing's relationship with its regulator, the Federal Aviation Administration, which has ramped up inspections of the manufacturer."", 'Earlier this week, the Justice Department said Boeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected the company from criminal charges tied to the two fatal 737 Max crashes, opening Boeing up to potential U.S. prosecution.']",-0.1307499503462509,"Calhoun in March said he will step down by year's end, months after a door plug panel blew out midflight from a Boeing 737 Max 9, ushering in new scrutiny of the manufacturer's safety and quality control issues.","Earlier this week, the Justice Department said Boeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected the company from criminal charges tied to the two fatal 737 Max crashes, opening Boeing up to potential U.S. prosecution.",-0.2865927815437317,"Earlier this week, the Justice Department said Boeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected the company from criminal charges tied to the two fatal 737 Max crashes, opening Boeing up to potential U.S. prosecution.","Boeing's latest problems have driven down deliveries of new aircraft, frustrating airline executives who have complained about having to change their flight schedules and scale back staffing.",2024-05-21 "Macy’s beats earnings estimates, as turnaround plan shows early progress",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/21/macys-m-q1-2024-earnings.html,2024-05-21T18:02:17+0000,"In this articleMacy's fiscal first-quarter earnings topped Wall Street's expectations on Tuesday, and the retailer's revenue came in roughly in line with revenue expectations as it pointed to early signs of momentum in its turnaround strategy.The department store operator raised its full-year earnings expectations to reflect the first-quarter beat, along with the low end of its sales outlook. On Macy's earnings call, CFO and COO Adrian Mitchell said the company assumes in its outlook that consumers ""will remain under pressure for the balance of the year.""But he added that the retailer expects to get a lift this year as it pushes ahead with its turnaround strategy online and in stores.The company's shares were up about 1% in early afternoon trading.On an earnings call with investors, CEO Tony Spring said the company is in the ""early innings"" of turning around its namesake stores. As the retailer has stepped up investments at 50 of its Macy's stores, customers have responded by visiting more often and buying more when they do, he said.For example, Macy's has made sure there are sales associates at those stores ready to help customers in the fitting rooms and shoe department, and at jewelry counters. The company has rolled out new brands like Donna Karan and expanded others like French Connection, Free People and Hugo Boss. And Macy's has tried to give shoppers more reasons to stop by, such as by offering personal styling sessions, fashion shows and fragrance bottle engraving, Spring added.""We need more variety,"" he said. ""We need less redundancy. We need more interest within the assortment and I think that's making a difference in the customer's reception to the stores.""Here's what Macy's reported for the three-month period that ended May 4 compared with what Wall Street expected, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:Macy's first-quarter net income tumbled 60% to $62 million, or 22 cents per share, compared with $155 million, or 56 cents per share, in the year-ago quarter. Net sales fell from $4.98 billion in the year-ago period.Macy's now anticipates net sales of between $22.3 billion and $22.9 billion, which would still represent a drop from $23.09 billion in 2023. It expects comparable sales, which take out the impact of store openings and closures, to range from a decline of about 1% to a gain of 1.5% on an owned-plus-licensed basis and including third-party marketplace sales. It had previously expected comparable sales to decline as much as 1.5%.It expects adjusted earnings per share of between $2.55 and $2.90, raising its previous outlook of between $2.45 and $2.85.Macy's is getting smaller as it tries to grow sales again. The department store operator, which includes Bloomingdale's and beauty chain Bluemercury, said earlier this year that it would close about 150 of its namesake stores. That's more than a quarter of its namesake Macy's locations. It had already announced five store closures and more than 2,300 layoffs in January.Yet the retailer said it will invest in parts of the business that have fared better, including the roughly 350 Macy's stores that will stay open. It plans to open more Bloomingdale's and Bluemercury locations, and smaller Macy's stores in suburban strip malls.In the first quarter, Bloomingdale's and Bluemercury continued to fare better than the company's namesake brand. At Bluemercury, comparable sales, a metric that takes out the impact of store openings and closures, rose 4.3%. At Bloomingdale's, comparable sales increased 0.3% on an owned-plus-licensed basis, including third-party marketplace sales. At Macy's, comparable sales declined 0.4% on an owned-plus-licensed basis, including the third-party marketplace.The company said the 150 underperforming Macy's stores – which will close by early 2027 – dragged down the results.At the approximately 350 Macy's stores that will stay open, comparable sales were up 0.1% on an owned-plus-licensed basis. At the first 50 of those stores to get additional investment, comparable sales were even better: up 3.4% on an owned-plus-licensed basis.Along with taking a hard look at its store footprint, Macy's has tried to attract more customers, including more millennial and Gen Z shoppers, by launching new exclusive brands and overhauling its existing ones.Macy's has contended with another challenge: a takeover bid by an activist investor. Arkhouse Management and Brigade Capital have made a bid to buy Macy's and take the company private. Arkhouse also waged a proxy battle, but settled the fight in April when Macy's agreed to add two new board members.Shares of Macy's closed Monday at $19.10, bringing the company's market value to $5.26 billion. As of Monday's close, the company's stock has fallen about 5% so far this year, lagging behind the S&P 500's approximately 11% gains during the same period.",CNBC,21/05/2024,"[""In this articleMacy's fiscal first-quarter earnings topped Wall Street's expectations on Tuesday, and the retailer's revenue came in roughly in line with revenue expectations as it pointed to early signs of momentum in its turnaround strategy."", 'The department store operator raised its full-year earnings expectations to reflect the first-quarter beat, along with the low end of its sales outlook.', 'On Macy\'s earnings call, CFO and COO Adrian Mitchell said the company assumes in its outlook that consumers ""will remain under pressure for the balance of the year.', '""But he added that the retailer expects to get a lift this year as it pushes ahead with its turnaround strategy online and in stores.', ""The company's shares were up about 1% in early afternoon trading."", 'On an earnings call with investors, CEO Tony Spring said the company is in the ""early innings"" of turning around its namesake stores.', ""As the retailer has stepped up investments at 50 of its Macy's stores, customers have responded by visiting more often and buying more when they do, he said."", ""For example, Macy's has made sure there are sales associates at those stores ready to help customers in the fitting rooms and shoe department, and at jewelry counters."", 'The company has rolled out new brands like Donna Karan and expanded others like French Connection, Free People and Hugo Boss.', ""And Macy's has tried to give shoppers more reasons to stop by, such as by offering personal styling sessions, fashion shows and fragrance bottle engraving, Spring added."", '""We need more variety,"" he said. ""', 'We need less redundancy.', ""We need more interest within the assortment and I think that's making a difference in the customer's reception to the stores."", '""Here\'s what Macy\'s reported for the three-month period that ended May 4 compared with what Wall Street expected, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:Macy\'s first-quarter net income tumbled 60% to $62 million, or 22 cents per share, compared with $155 million, or 56 cents per share, in the year-ago quarter.', 'Net sales fell from $4.98 billion in the year-ago period.', ""Macy's now anticipates net sales of between $22.3 billion and $22.9 billion, which would still represent a drop from $23.09 billion in 2023."", 'It expects comparable sales, which take out the impact of store openings and closures, to range from a decline of about 1% to a gain of 1.5% on an owned-plus-licensed basis and including third-party marketplace sales.', ""It had previously expected comparable sales to decline as much as 1.5%.It expects adjusted earnings per share of between $2.55 and $2.90, raising its previous outlook of between $2.45 and $2.85.Macy's is getting smaller as it tries to grow sales again."", ""The department store operator, which includes Bloomingdale's and beauty chain Bluemercury, said earlier this year that it would close about 150 of its namesake stores."", ""That's more than a quarter of its namesake Macy's locations."", 'It had already announced five store closures and more than 2,300 layoffs in January.', ""Yet the retailer said it will invest in parts of the business that have fared better, including the roughly 350 Macy's stores that will stay open."", ""It plans to open more Bloomingdale's and Bluemercury locations, and smaller Macy's stores in suburban strip malls."", ""In the first quarter, Bloomingdale's and Bluemercury continued to fare better than the company's namesake brand."", 'At Bluemercury, comparable sales, a metric that takes out the impact of store openings and closures, rose 4.3%.', ""At Bloomingdale's, comparable sales increased 0.3% on an owned-plus-licensed basis, including third-party marketplace sales."", ""At Macy's, comparable sales declined 0.4% on an owned-plus-licensed basis, including the third-party marketplace."", ""The company said the 150 underperforming Macy's stores – which will close by early 2027 – dragged down the results."", ""At the approximately 350 Macy's stores that will stay open, comparable sales were up 0.1% on an owned-plus-licensed basis."", 'At the first 50 of those stores to get additional investment, comparable sales were even better: up 3.4% on an owned-plus-licensed basis.', ""Along with taking a hard look at its store footprint, Macy's has tried to attract more customers, including more millennial and Gen Z shoppers, by launching new exclusive brands and overhauling its existing ones."", ""Macy's has contended with another challenge: a takeover bid by an activist investor."", ""Arkhouse Management and Brigade Capital have made a bid to buy Macy's and take the company private."", ""Arkhouse also waged a proxy battle, but settled the fight in April when Macy's agreed to add two new board members."", ""Shares of Macy's closed Monday at $19.10, bringing the company's market value to $5.26 billion."", ""As of Monday's close, the company's stock has fallen about 5% so far this year, lagging behind the S&P 500's approximately 11% gains during the same period.""]",0.164355802615501,"The company has rolled out new brands like Donna Karan and expanded others like French Connection, Free People and Hugo Boss.","Arkhouse also waged a proxy battle, but settled the fight in April when Macy's agreed to add two new board members.",0.2019062495231628,"At Bluemercury, comparable sales, a metric that takes out the impact of store openings and closures, rose 4.3%.","It had previously expected comparable sales to decline as much as 1.5%.It expects adjusted earnings per share of between $2.55 and $2.90, raising its previous outlook of between $2.45 and $2.85.Macy's is getting smaller as it tries to grow sales again.",2024-05-21 Here's where rents are rising — and where they're falling,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/21/where-rents-are-rising.html,2024-05-21T18:27:06+0000,"Driven by the work-from-home dynamic, as well as by new migration patterns, both single-family and multifamily rent prices were red-hot during the first years of the pandemic.Now different drivers are pushing some rents higher — and throwing cold water on others.Multifamily rents in April were 0.8% lower than they were in the same month last year, according to Apartment List. Rents cooled because a massive amount of new supply entered the market, with still more in the pipeline.Apartment rents did rise for the third straight month, but the growth, at 0.5%, is very small. Rents usually begin to rise in the spring, and the gain this year is not only smaller than usual but smaller than the previous month's gain. The national median rent in April was $1,396.""This is typically the time of year when rent growth is accelerating heading into the busy moving season, so the fact that growth stalled this month could be a sign that the market is headed for another slow summer,"" according to the Apartment List report.Apartment vacancies are also climbing, hitting 6.7% as of March, marking the highest reading since August 2020. New multifamily building permits are slowing down, but the number of units currently under construction is near a record high, and last year saw the most new apartments hit the market in over 30 years.Single-family rents are much stronger, up 3.4% in March year over year, according to a new report from CoreLogic. That annual increase, however, continues to shrink as more supply comes onto the market from build-for-rent companies.Roughly 18,000 single-family, built-for-rent homes were started during the first quarter, a 20% increase from the first quarter of 2023, according to an analysis of Census data by the National Association of Home Builders. Over the last four quarters, 80,000 such homes began construction, representing a nearly 16% jump from the prior four quarters.""U.S. single-family rent growth strengthened overall in March, though some weaknesses are revealed in the latest numbers,"" said Molly Boesel, principal economist for CoreLogic. ""Overbuilt areas, such as Austin, Texas, continued to soften, decreasing by 3.5% annually in March.""The continued strength overall in single-family rents indicates that potential homebuyers who are priced out of the home-purchase market are choosing to rent similar alternatives, according to Boesel. Mortgage rates have risen back into the 7% range, and home prices continue to rise, making it harder to buy a home.Of the nation's 20 largest cities, Seattle saw the highest year-over-year increase in single-family rents at 6.3%, followed by New York at 5.3% and Boston at 5.2%. Those leading the declines were Austin, Texas, down 3.5%; Miami, down 3.2%; and New Orleans, down 1.4%.For the first time in 14 years, however, single-family attached properties, namely townhomes, posted a year-over-year rent decline.""The decrease in the attached segment is being driven by a subset of markets, mostly in Florida, but including Austin and New Orleans. As multifamily apartments are being completed, some markets are gaining rental supply, which competes with the attached segment of the single-family rental market,"" Boesel added.",CNBC,21/05/2024,"['Driven by the work-from-home dynamic, as well as by new migration patterns, both single-family and multifamily rent prices were red-hot during the first years of the pandemic.', 'Now different drivers are pushing some rents higher — and throwing cold water on others.', 'Multifamily rents in April were 0.8% lower than they were in the same month last year, according to Apartment List.', 'Rents cooled because a massive amount of new supply entered the market, with still more in the pipeline.', 'Apartment rents did rise for the third straight month, but the growth, at 0.5%, is very small.', ""Rents usually begin to rise in the spring, and the gain this year is not only smaller than usual but smaller than the previous month's gain."", 'The national median rent in April was $1,396.""This is typically the time of year when rent growth is accelerating heading into the busy moving season, so the fact that growth stalled this month could be a sign that the market is headed for another slow summer,"" according to the Apartment List report.', 'Apartment vacancies are also climbing, hitting 6.7% as of March, marking the highest reading since August 2020.', 'New multifamily building permits are slowing down, but the number of units currently under construction is near a record high, and last year saw the most new apartments hit the market in over 30 years.', 'Single-family rents are much stronger, up 3.4% in March year over year, according to a new report from CoreLogic.', 'That annual increase, however, continues to shrink as more supply comes onto the market from build-for-rent companies.', 'Roughly 18,000 single-family, built-for-rent homes were started during the first quarter, a 20% increase from the first quarter of 2023, according to an analysis of Census data by the National Association of Home Builders.', 'Over the last four quarters, 80,000 such homes began construction, representing a nearly 16% jump from the prior four quarters.', '""U.S. single-family rent growth strengthened overall in March, though some weaknesses are revealed in the latest numbers,"" said Molly Boesel, principal economist for CoreLogic. ""', 'Overbuilt areas, such as Austin, Texas, continued to soften, decreasing by 3.5% annually in March.', '""The continued strength overall in single-family rents indicates that potential homebuyers who are priced out of the home-purchase market are choosing to rent similar alternatives, according to Boesel.', 'Mortgage rates have risen back into the 7% range, and home prices continue to rise, making it harder to buy a home.', ""Of the nation's 20 largest cities, Seattle saw the highest year-over-year increase in single-family rents at 6.3%, followed by New York at 5.3% and Boston at 5.2%."", 'Those leading the declines were Austin, Texas, down 3.5%; Miami, down 3.2%; and New Orleans, down 1.4%.For the first time in 14 years, however, single-family attached properties, namely townhomes, posted a year-over-year rent decline.', '""The decrease in the attached segment is being driven by a subset of markets, mostly in Florida, but including Austin and New Orleans.', 'As multifamily apartments are being completed, some markets are gaining rental supply, which competes with the attached segment of the single-family rental market,"" Boesel added.']",0.2372042158816055,"Rents usually begin to rise in the spring, and the gain this year is not only smaller than usual but smaller than the previous month's gain.","Multifamily rents in April were 0.8% lower than they were in the same month last year, according to Apartment List.",0.1080934524536132,"Single-family rents are much stronger, up 3.4% in March year over year, according to a new report from CoreLogic.","Those leading the declines were Austin, Texas, down 3.5%; Miami, down 3.2%; and New Orleans, down 1.4%.For the first time in 14 years, however, single-family attached properties, namely townhomes, posted a year-over-year rent decline.",2024-05-21 "NBC hires former RNC chair Ronna McDaniel, who has demonized the press and refused to acknowledge Biden was fairly elected",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/22/media/ronna-mcdaniel-nbc/index.html," Published 1:53 PM EDT, Fri March 22, 2024 ","NBC News on Friday announced that it had hired Ronna McDaniel, the former Republican National Committee chair who has repeatedly attacked the network and its journalists, assailed the news media as “fake news” and promoted false claims around the 2020 vote, as an on-air commentator ahead of the 2024 presidential election. “It couldn’t be a more important moment to have a voice like Ronna’s on the team,” Carrie Budoff Brown, senior vice president of politics at NBC News, said in a memo to staff. McDaniel exited the RNC earlier this month after leading the organization since 2016. During her time as chair, McDaniel repeatedly attacked the press, which has become increasingly popular in Republican circles over the last several years as Donald Trump demonizes journalists and news institutions. McDaniel echoed many such attacks, labeling the press as “fake news” and calling the media “corrupt.” At times, she even targeted NBC News and MSNBC with dishonest attacks. In 2019, for instance, McDaniel accused Richard Engel, NBC News’ chief foreign correspondent, of “actively cheering for an economic downturn.” “How can NBC let him keep his job when he’s made his bias so clear?” McDaniel asked. McDaniel has a lengthier history attacking the progressive cable news channel MSNBC, which she will appear on in her new role. In recent years, she has repeatedly attacked the channel for “spreading lies” and blasted those she described as the network’s “primetime propagandists.” An NBC spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment about her attacks on the news media and NBC. In her role as RNC chief, McDaniel also fanned the flames of election denialism after the 2020 presidential contest. McDaniel was involved in a phone call in 2020 to pressure Michigan county officials not to certify the vote from the Detroit area, where Joe Biden had a commanding lead. McDaniel told the officials, regarding the certification: “Do not sign it. … We will get you attorneys.” The Michigan Department of State’s office condemned her claims of supposed voter fraud in the wake of the election, stating they had “no merit.” The state’s “elections were conducted fairly, effectively and transparently and are an accurate reflection of the will of Michigan voters,” it said in a detailed fact check posted online. In an interview with CNN’s Chris Wallace last year, McDaniel defended her claims of voting “irregularity” in the election. “I think saying that there were problems with 2020 is very real. I don’t think that’s election denying,” McDaniel told Wallace. “I’m from Wayne County. We had a woman send a note saying I’m being told to backdate ballots. We had to look into that. That’s deeply concerning. When you have friends who are poll-watching and being kicked out, that’s deeply concerning. We have every right to look at that.” In the interview, Wallace pressed McDaniel if she believed Biden legitimately won the election. “I think there were lots of problems with 2020. Ultimately, he won the election but there were lots of problems with the 2020 election,” she said. “But I don’t think he won it fair. I don’t. I’m not going to say that.” NBC’s hiring of McDaniel, however, plays into a recent trend at the network’s outlets, which has seemingly softened its stance on Trump as he inches toward the Republican nomination for president. Earlier this month, CNBC hosted Trump for a lengthy phone interview in which the network’s anchors allowed him to peddle lies and conspiracy theories on air without scrutiny. MSNBC has even started carrying Trump’s remarks live on television, a practice that the network boasted for years it would not do. Star host Rachel Maddow, who has said carrying Trump’s lies on the air is dangerous, even objected to the network broadcasting a recent speech from the presumptive Republican nominee, calling it “irresponsible.”",CNN,22/03/2024,"['NBC News on Friday announced that it had hired Ronna McDaniel, the former Republican National Committee chair who has repeatedlyattacked the network and its journalists,assailed thenewsmedia as “fake news” and promoted false claims around the 2020vote,as an on-air commentatorahead of the 2024 presidential election.', '“It couldn’t be a more important moment to have a voice like Ronna’s on the team,” Carrie Budoff Brown, senior vice president of politics at NBC News, said in a memoto staff.', 'McDaniel exited the RNC earlier this month after leading the organization since 2016.', 'During her time as chair, McDaniel repeatedly attacked the press, which has become increasingly popular in Republican circles over the last several years as Donald Trump demonizes journalists and news institutions.', 'McDaniel echoed many such attacks, labeling the press as “fake news” and calling the media “corrupt.”', 'At times, she even targeted NBC Newsand MSNBCwith dishonest attacks.', 'In 2019, for instance, McDaniel accused Richard Engel, NBC News’ chief foreign correspondent, of “actively cheering for an economic downturn.”', '“How can NBC let him keep his job when he’s made his bias so clear?”', 'McDaniel asked.', 'McDaniel has a lengthier history attacking the progressive cable news channel MSNBC, which she will appear on in her new role.', 'In recent years, she has repeatedly attacked the channel for “spreading lies” and blasted those she described as the network’s “primetime propagandists.”', 'An NBC spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment about her attacks on the news media and NBC.', 'In her role as RNC chief, McDaniel also fanned the flames of election denialism after the 2020 presidential contest.', 'McDaniel was involved in a phone call in 2020 to pressure Michigan county officials not to certify the vote from the Detroit area, where Joe Biden had a commanding lead.', 'McDanieltold the officials, regarding the certification: “Do not sign it. …', 'We will get you attorneys.”', 'The Michigan Department of State’s office condemned her claims of supposed voter fraud in the wake of the election, stating they had “no merit.', '”The state’s “elections were conducted fairly, effectively and transparently and are an accurate reflection of the will of Michigan voters,” it said in adetailed fact checkposted online.', 'In an interview with CNN’s Chris Wallace last year, McDaniel defended her claims of voting “irregularity” in the election.', '“I think saying that there were problems with 2020 is very real.', 'I don’t think that’s election denying,” McDaniel told Wallace. “', 'I’m from Wayne County.', 'We had a woman send a note saying I’m being told to backdate ballots.', 'We had to look into that.', 'That’s deeply concerning.', 'When you have friends who are poll-watching and being kicked out, that’s deeply concerning.', 'We have every right to look at that.”', 'In the interview,Wallace pressed McDaniel if she believed Biden legitimately won the election.', '“I think there were lots of problems with 2020.', 'Ultimately, he won the electionbut there were lots of problems with the 2020 election,” she said. “', 'But I don’t think he won it fair.', 'I don’t.', 'I’m not going to say that.”', 'NBC’s hiring of McDaniel, however, plays into a recent trend at thenetwork’s outlets, which has seemingly softened its stance on Trump as he inches toward the Republican nomination for president.', 'Earlier this month, CNBC hosted Trump for a lengthy phone interview in which the network’s anchors allowed him to peddle lies and conspiracy theories on airwithout scrutiny.', 'MSNBC has even started carrying Trump’s remarks live on television, a practice that the network boasted for years it would not do.', 'Star host Rachel Maddow, who has said carrying Trump’s lieson the airis dangerous, even objected to the network broadcasting a recent speech from the presumptive Republican nominee, calling it “irresponsible.”']",-0.069193576701305,But I don’t think he won it fair.,"At times, she even targeted NBC Newsand MSNBCwith dishonest attacks.",-0.2803101042906443,"NBC’s hiring of McDaniel, however, plays into a recent trend at thenetwork’s outlets, which has seemingly softened its stance on Trump as he inches toward the Republican nomination for president.",“I think there were lots of problems with 2020.,2024-05-21 NBC News boss Cesar Conde faces backlash from his network’s anchors over ‘inexplicable’ decision to hire ex-RNC chair Ronna McDaniel,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/media/nbc-news-cesar-conde-ronna-mcdaniel-backlash/index.html," Published 8:05 AM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","Cesar Conde has a decision to make — and it’s not an especially difficult one. The NBCUniversal News Group chair is facing a torrent of backlash from his own staff after greenlighting the hire of former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel as a paid network contributor. Over the last 24 hours, the most prominent and recognizable NBC News and MSNBC personalities have voiced strong displeasure with the company’s decision to welcome McDaniel to “the team.” And they’re not doing it via anonymous comments to the press. They’re doing it on the record on NBCU’s own air. Chuck Todd broke the dam on Sunday’s “Meet the Press” with a set of candid comments about the hiring, and Rachel Maddow capped the flood of backlash Monday night with a blistering 30-minute monologue eviscerating the network’s leadership for the “inexplicable” move. Suffice to say, NBCU News Group is in unprecedented territory. Never has a network’s C-suite ever been so thoroughly flogged by its most high-profile stars in such no holds barred fashion. Saying that Conde simply has a crisis on his hands would be a contender for understatement of the year. It’s a five-alarm fire at NBCU News Group, and one of Conde’s own making. While NBC News president Rebecca Blumenstein and senior vice president of politics Carrie Budoff Brown were most directly responsible for McDaniel’s hiring, a decision that MSNBC boss Rashida Jones did not object to it at the time, the buck ultimately stops with Conde, who hold the real power at the Peacock Network. McDaniel’s hiring could not have happened without Conde’s blessing. It does not take a brilliant political mind with prescient foresight to understand that hiring McDaniel would ignite a firestorm of outrage — from both within 30 Rock and outside it. Conde, someone who ostensibly supports American democracy, should have rejected McDaniel’s hiring on the grounds that NBCU News Group could not put someone on its payroll who tried to subvert the 2020 vote. As so many of NBCU’s staffers have underscored, the objection to McDaniel is not that she is a Republican. It’s not even that she is a Donald Trump-supporting Republican. It’s that she was an active participant in the plot to overthrow the last presidential election. That is not to even mention McDaniel’s years of demonizing the press, smearing the journalists who work at NBC News and MSNBC as she sought to destroy the credibility of the organization that she ran to after being chased out of the RNC. The notion put forward by NBC that it needed to hire McDaniel to bring its viewers “an insider’s perspective on national politics and the future of the Republican Party” is absurd. If that’s the case, the network should move to hire free agents like Tucker Carlson or Candace Owens. They too have their hands on the pulse of the Republican Party. In fact, they represent much more of where the GOP stands today than McDaniel. So, using NBC’s logic, why not hire them? (Spoiler: News organizations rightfully have established basic standards for paid contributors. Asking that your employees have a commitment to democracy, to the truth, and to basic decency is not a big ask.) But even if Conde has no allegiance to basic democratic principles, which this hire calls into question, given that he is known to be a political player who cares deeply about his own image in the press, he should have been wise enough to foresee that hiring McDaniel would be an ill-conceived move. How this did not occur to Conde is unfathomable and shows a tremendous lack of judgment. Even more bizarre is Conde’s management, or lack thereof, since the controversy erupted. It was clear early on that his employees at NBC News and MSNBC did not support McDaniel’s hiring. If that was not evident on Friday, it was clear as day on Sunday after “Meet the Press.” The network’s employees were not only flabbergasted and demoralized by the move, but absolutely enraged by it. At that point, the writing should have been on the wall for Conde — as it was for every other media executive that I have spoken with over the last 24 hours. It is evident that McDaniel has no real future as an NBC analyst and the decision to bring her on as a contributor will have to be reversed. After all, which NBC or MSNBC program is going to invite her on after all of this? The only real question for Conde after the Sunday morning scolding should have been how he chose to back out of the deal in the least painful way possible. To be fully honest, I very much expected a Sunday evening announcement from NBC, one that would have earned praise from the company’s staff and quickly been swept away by the rush of Trump news Monday morning. But no such announcement came. Instead, Conde has allowed the mess to spiral absolutely out of control. MSNBC’s top stars hammered the network’s leadership throughout the day Monday over the hire. NBC News’ Guild blasted Conde, saying in a statement that under him the company had quietly laid off employees over the last month and instead chosen to “prioritize an election denier over its reporters.” The already severe crisis was allowed to blossom into one of the worst corporate public relations catastrophes in recent memory. All the while, Conde has remained silent. I asked his spokesperson, Stephen Labaton, on Monday whether the NBCU News Group boss had any comment on the situation. Does he have any regret? I didn’t get an on-the-record response. Suffice to say, however, that what Conde does moving forward will say a lot about his character and commitment to democratic values. It will also say a lot about the NBCU News Group and what type of organization it is. In her biting monologue on Monday night, however, Maddow did offer Conde a way out of this mess. “Mistakes will be made,” Maddow said.”But our resilience as a democracy is going to be recognizing when decisions are bad ones and reversing those bad decisions. Hearing legitimate criticism, responding to it, and correcting course. Not digging in. Not blaming others. Take a minute. Acknowledge that maybe it wasn’t the right call.” “It is a sign of strength, not weakness, to acknowledge when you are wrong,” Maddow added. “It is a sign of strength. And our country needs us to be strong now.”",CNN,26/03/2024,"['Cesar Conde has a decision to make — and it’s not an especially difficult one.', 'The NBCUniversal News Group chair is facing a torrent of backlash from his own staff after greenlighting the hire of former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel as a paid network contributor.', 'Over the last 24 hours, the most prominent and recognizable NBC News and MSNBC personalities have voiced strong displeasure with the company’s decision to welcome McDaniel to “the team.”', 'And they’re not doing it via anonymous comments to the press.', 'They’re doing it on the record on NBCU’s own air.', 'Chuck Todd broke the dam on Sunday’s “Meet the Press” with a set of candid comments about the hiring, and Rachel Maddow capped the flood of backlash Monday night with a blistering 30-minute monologue eviscerating the network’s leadership for the “inexplicable” move.', 'Suffice to say, NBCU News Group is in unprecedented territory.', 'Never has a network’s C-suite ever been so thoroughly flogged by its most high-profile stars in such no holds barred fashion.', 'Saying that Conde simply has a crisis on his hands would be a contender for understatement of the year.', 'It’s a five-alarm fire at NBCU News Group, and one of Conde’s own making.', 'While NBC News president Rebecca Blumenstein and senior vice president of politics Carrie Budoff Brown were most directly responsible for McDaniel’s hiring, a decision that MSNBC boss Rashida Jones did not object to it at the time, the buck ultimately stops with Conde, who hold the real power at the Peacock Network.', 'McDaniel’s hiring could not have happened without Conde’s blessing.', 'It does not take a brilliant political mind with prescient foresight to understand that hiring McDaniel would ignite a firestorm of outrage — from both within 30 Rock and outside it.', 'Conde, someone who ostensibly supports American democracy, should have rejected McDaniel’s hiring on the grounds that NBCU News Group could not put someone on its payroll who tried to subvert the 2020 vote.', 'As so many of NBCU’s staffers have underscored, the objection to McDaniel is not that she is a Republican.', 'It’s not even that she is a Donald Trump-supporting Republican.', 'It’s that she was an active participant in the plot to overthrow the last presidential election.', 'That is not to even mention McDaniel’s years of demonizing the press, smearing the journalists who work at NBC News and MSNBC as she sought to destroy the credibility of the organization that she ran to after being chased out of the RNC.', 'The notion put forward by NBC that it needed to hire McDaniel to bring its viewers “an insider’s perspective on national politics and the future of the Republican Party” is absurd.', 'If that’s the case, the network should move to hire free agents like Tucker Carlson or Candace Owens.', 'They too have their hands on the pulse of the Republican Party.', 'In fact, they represent much more of where the GOP stands today than McDaniel.', 'So, using NBC’s logic, why not hire them? (', 'Spoiler: News organizations rightfully have established basic standards for paid contributors.', 'Asking that your employees have a commitment to democracy, to the truth, and to basic decency is not a big ask.)', 'But even if Conde has no allegiance to basic democratic principles, which this hire calls into question, given that he is known to be a political player who cares deeply about his own image in the press, he should have been wise enough to foresee that hiring McDaniel would be an ill-conceived move.', 'How this did not occur to Conde is unfathomable and shows a tremendous lack of judgment.', 'Even more bizarre is Conde’s management, or lack thereof, since the controversy erupted.', 'It was clear early on that his employees at NBC News and MSNBC did not support McDaniel’s hiring.', 'If that was not evident on Friday, it was clear as day on Sunday after “Meet the Press.”', 'The network’s employees were not only flabbergasted and demoralized by the move, but absolutely enraged by it.', 'At that point, the writing should have been on the wall for Conde — as it was for every other media executive that I have spoken with over the last 24 hours.', 'It is evident that McDaniel has no real future as an NBC analyst and the decision to bring her on as a contributor will have to be reversed.', 'After all, which NBC or MSNBC program is going to invite her on after all of this?', 'The only real question for Conde after the Sunday morning scolding should have been how he chose to back out of the deal in the least painful way possible.', 'To be fully honest, I very much expected a Sunday evening announcement from NBC, one that would have earned praise from the company’s staff and quickly been swept away by the rush of Trump news Monday morning.', 'But no such announcement came.', 'Instead, Conde has allowed the mess to spiral absolutely out of control.', 'MSNBC’s top stars hammered the network’s leadership throughout the day Monday over the hire.', 'NBC News’ Guild blasted Conde, saying in a statement that under him the company had quietly laid off employees over the last month and instead chosen to “prioritize an election denier over its reporters.”', 'The already severe crisis was allowed to blossom into one of the worst corporate public relations catastrophes in recent memory.', 'All the while, Conde has remained silent.', 'I asked his spokesperson, Stephen Labaton, on Monday whether the NBCU News Group boss had any comment on the situation.', 'Does he have any regret?', 'I didn’t get an on-the-record response.', 'Suffice to say, however, that what Conde does moving forward will say a lot about his character and commitment to democratic values.', 'It will also say a lot about the NBCU News Group and what type of organization it is.', 'In her biting monologue on Monday night, however, Maddow did offer Conde a way out of this mess.', '“Mistakes will be made,” Maddow said.', '”But our resilience as a democracy is going to be recognizing when decisions are bad ones and reversing those bad decisions.', 'Hearing legitimate criticism, responding to it, and correcting course.', 'Not digging in.', 'Not blaming others.', 'Take a minute.', 'Acknowledge that maybe it wasn’t the right call.”', '“It is a sign of strength, not weakness, to acknowledge when you are wrong,” Maddow added. “', 'It is a sign of strength.', 'And our country needs us to be strong now.”']",-0.032955005531589,"Over the last 24 hours, the most prominent and recognizable NBC News and MSNBC personalities have voiced strong displeasure with the company’s decision to welcome McDaniel to “the team.”",The already severe crisis was allowed to blossom into one of the worst corporate public relations catastrophes in recent memory.,-0.5018035081716684,"To be fully honest, I very much expected a Sunday evening announcement from NBC, one that would have earned praise from the company’s staff and quickly been swept away by the rush of Trump news Monday morning.","The network’s employees were not only flabbergasted and demoralized by the move, but absolutely enraged by it.",2024-05-21 "Boeing supplier Spirit AeroSystems lays off workers, citing lower plane delivery rates",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/spirit-aerosystems-layoffs.html,2024-05-16T20:17:00+0000,"In this articleAerospace supplier Spirit AeroSystems on Thursday said it will lay off some of its workers because of slower delivery rates on commercial aircraft as it struggles with a slowdown at its biggest commercial airplane customer, Boeing.Spirit AeroSystems told staff in a memo, reported earlier by Wichita-based KSN, that it would cut about 400 to 450 hourly employees.""We are committed to implementing this transition in as compassionate a manner as possible,"" Spirit AeroSystems said in a statement.About 12,600 people worked at the Wichita facility as of the end of 2023, according to the company's annual filing.Spirit AeroSystems makes fuselages at the plant for Boeing's bestselling 737 Max plane, deliveries of which have slowed in the wake of a door panel blowout and resulting safety crisis at Boeing.Last week, Spirit AeroSystems said first-quarter Boeing deliveries decreased 31% from the same period in 2023, and said overall deliveries were down 11.3%.It reported a quarterly loss of $616.7 million for the first three months of the year. The company has struggled financially in recent years and was last profitable in 2019. The company is also in talks to be acquired by Boeing, which it spun off from in 2005. About 70% of Spirit AeroSystems' revenue last year came from Boeing, although the company also makes parts for Boeing's rival Airbus.Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun told CNBC in an interview in April 2024 that it is ""more than likely"" that the companies reach a deal during the second quarter.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"['In this articleAerospace supplier Spirit AeroSystems on Thursday said it will lay off some of its workers because of slower delivery rates on commercial aircraft as it struggles with a slowdown at its biggest commercial airplane customer, Boeing.', 'Spirit AeroSystems told staff in a memo, reported earlier by Wichita-based KSN, that it would cut about 400 to 450 hourly employees.', '""We are committed to implementing this transition in as compassionate a manner as possible,"" Spirit AeroSystems said in a statement.', ""About 12,600 people worked at the Wichita facility as of the end of 2023, according to the company's annual filing."", ""Spirit AeroSystems makes fuselages at the plant for Boeing's bestselling 737 Max plane, deliveries of which have slowed in the wake of a door panel blowout and resulting safety crisis at Boeing."", 'Last week, Spirit AeroSystems said first-quarter Boeing deliveries decreased 31% from the same period in 2023, and said overall deliveries were down 11.3%.It reported a quarterly loss of $616.7 million for the first three months of the year.', 'The company has struggled financially in recent years and was last profitable in 2019.The company is also in talks to be acquired by Boeing, which it spun off from in 2005.', ""About 70% of Spirit AeroSystems' revenue last year came from Boeing, although the company also makes parts for Boeing's rival Airbus."", 'Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun told CNBC in an interview in April 2024 that it is ""more than likely"" that the companies reach a deal during the second quarter.']",0.0487687692160598,"""We are committed to implementing this transition in as compassionate a manner as possible,"" Spirit AeroSystems said in a statement.","In this articleAerospace supplier Spirit AeroSystems on Thursday said it will lay off some of its workers because of slower delivery rates on commercial aircraft as it struggles with a slowdown at its biggest commercial airplane customer, Boeing.",-0.9941206216812134,,"Last week, Spirit AeroSystems said first-quarter Boeing deliveries decreased 31% from the same period in 2023, and said overall deliveries were down 11.3%.It reported a quarterly loss of $616.7 million for the first three months of the year.",2024-05-21 NBC News ousts Ronna McDaniel after network’s anchors launch unprecedented on-air rebellion,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/media/nbc-news-ousts-ronna-mcdaniel/index.html," Updated 7:44 PM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","NBC News on Tuesday ousted former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel, just days after her hiring as a paid political analyst sparked intense backlash from the network’s top television anchors over McDaniel’s role in subverting the 2020 election and attacks on the press. “There is no doubt that the last several days have been difficult for the News Group,” NBCUniversal News Group President Cesar Conde said in a memo to staff. “After listening to the legitimate concerns of many of you, I have decided that Ronna McDaniel will not be an NBC News contributor.” “I want to personally apologize to our team members who felt we let them down,” Conde continued. “While this was a collective recommendation by some members of our leadership team, I approved it and take full responsibility for it.” Ahead of the network’s decision, McDaniel spent the day Tuesday interviewing attorneys in preparation for a potential legal battle with NBC, a person familiar with the matter told CNN. Creative Artists Agency, the talent agency that brokered McDaniel’s deal with NBC, also parted ways with her, the person said. The reversal comes after journalists and anchors at both NBC and its cable news sibling MSNBC publicly denounced the decision to hire McDaniel as a paid analyst in a stunning and unprecedented on-air rebuke of network brass that has embarrassed the Peacock Network. McDaniel, who recently stepped down from the RNC under pressure from former President Donald Trump, was involved in attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 election. As head of the RNC, she was involved in a phone call in 2020 to pressure Michigan county officials not to certify the vote from the Detroit area, where Joe Biden had a commanding lead. McDaniel told the officials, regarding the certification: “Do not sign it. … We will get you attorneys.” In the years since, McDaniel continued to claim that the election had “problems” and that Biden did not legitimately win the election, fanning the flames of election denialism. NBC’s announcement Friday that it had hired McDaniel was quickly met with alarm by the network’s journalists. The revolt spilled into public view on Sunday when McDaniel appeared on “Meet the Press” with moderator Kristen Welker in her first interview since she was hired by the network. Welker disclosed that the interview had been scheduled to take place prior to NBC announcing McDaniel would become a paid contributor for the network, stating that she had no involvement in her hiring. Following the interview, Chuck Todd, NBC News’ chief political analyst, delivered a stinging on-air criticism of NBC executives for their decision to hire McDaniel, telling Welker, “I think our bosses owe you an apology for putting you in this situation.” “There’s a reason a lot of journalists at NBC News are uncomfortable with this,” Todd said, explaining that under McDaniel, the RNC engaged in “gaslighting” and “character assassination” when dealing with the news media. The following day, MSNBC hosts Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough joined Todd in protesting the decision on their program “Morning Joe.” “To be clear, we believe NBC News should seek out conservative Republican voices to provide balance in their election coverage, but it should be conservative Republicans, not a person who used her position of power to be an anti-democracy election denier,” Brzezinski said. “We hope NBC will reconsider its decision. It goes without saying that she will not be a guest on ‘Morning Joe’ in her capacity as a paid contributor.” Nicolle Wallace, host of MSNBC’s “Deadline: White House,” later joined in the rebuke, saying on her program that the network’s decision to hire McDaniel was nothing short of a potential threat to democracy. “NBC News is, either wittingly or unwittingly, teaching election deniers that what they can do stretches well beyond appearing on our air and interviews to peddle lies about the sanctity and integrity of our elections,” Wallace told viewers. Rachel Maddow — the network’s biggest star — later devoted the first half-hour of her prime-time program to the controversy, saying the decision to hire McDaniel was “inexplicable.” Maddow took issue with McDaniel’s long track record of demonizing the news media, labeling the press as “fake news,” and launching ugly attacks on NBC News journalists and MSNBC hosts. “We do not take it personally when we get attacked, when they say they want to put us on trial and execute us for treason,” she said. “And so I want to associate myself with all my colleagues at MSNBC and NBC News who have voiced loud and principled objections to our company for putting on the payroll someone who hasn’t just attacked us as journalists, but someone who is part of an ongoing project to get rid of our system of government,” she said of McDaniel. “Someone who is still trying to convince Americans that this election stuff doesn’t really work. That this last election wasn’t a real result. That American elections are fraudulent.“ The on-air revolt ensnared NBC’s top leaders, including NBCUniversal News Group chair Cesar Conde, NBC News president Rebecca Blumenstein and senior vice president of politics Carrie Budoff Brown, who were responsible for McDaniel’s hiring. MSNBC president Rashida Jones also did not object to the decision, people familiar with the matter said. In the wake of Conde’s announcement to sever ties with McDaniel, MSNBC host Joy Reid and Maddow addressed the reversal on the network’s air, praising the move as “bold” and “strong.” “I think it is a show of strength and a show of respect for the people who work at this company and make us who we are,” Maddow said. “That leadership was willing to change on this, I’m grateful to them.”",CNN,26/03/2024,"['NBC News on Tuesday ousted former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel, just days after her hiring as a paid political analyst sparked intense backlash from the network’s top television anchors over McDaniel’s role in subverting the 2020 election and attacks on the press.', '“There is no doubt that the last several days have been difficult for the News Group,” NBCUniversal News Group President Cesar Conde said in a memo to staff. “', 'After listening to the legitimate concerns of many of you, I have decided that Ronna McDaniel will not be an NBC News contributor.”', '“I want to personally apologize to our team members who felt we let them down,” Conde continued. “', 'While this was a collective recommendation by some members of our leadership team, I approved it and take full responsibility for it.”', 'Ahead of the network’s decision, McDaniel spent the day Tuesday interviewing attorneys in preparation for a potential legal battle with NBC, a person familiar with the matter told CNN.', 'Creative Artists Agency, the talent agency that brokered McDaniel’s deal with NBC, also parted ways with her, the person said.', 'The reversal comes after journalists and anchors at both NBC and its cable news sibling MSNBC publicly denounced the decision to hire McDaniel as a paid analyst in a stunning and unprecedented on-air rebuke of network brass that has embarrassed the Peacock Network.', 'McDaniel, who recently stepped down from the RNC under pressure from former President Donald Trump, was involved in attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 election.', 'As head of the RNC, she was involved in a phone call in 2020 to pressure Michigan county officials not to certify the vote from the Detroit area, where Joe Biden had a commanding lead.', 'McDanieltold the officials, regarding the certification: “Do not sign it. …', 'We will get you attorneys.”', 'In the years since, McDaniel continued to claim that the election had “problems” and that Biden did not legitimately win the election, fanning the flames of election denialism.', 'NBC’s announcement Friday that it had hired McDaniel was quickly met with alarm by the network’s journalists.', 'The revolt spilled into public view on Sunday when McDaniel appeared on “Meet the Press” with moderator Kristen Welker in her first interview since she was hired by the network.', 'Welker disclosed that the interview had been scheduled to take place prior to NBC announcing McDaniel would become a paid contributor for the network, stating that she had no involvement in her hiring.', 'Following the interview, Chuck Todd, NBC News’ chief political analyst, delivered a stinging on-air criticism of NBC executives for their decision to hire McDaniel, telling Welker, “I think our bosses owe you an apology for putting you in this situation.”', '“There’s a reason a lot of journalists at NBC News are uncomfortable with this,” Todd said, explaining that under McDaniel, the RNC engaged in “gaslighting” and “character assassination” when dealing with the news media.', 'The following day, MSNBC hosts Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough joined Todd in protesting the decision on their program “Morning Joe.”', '“To be clear, we believe NBC News should seek out conservative Republican voices to provide balance in their election coverage, but it should be conservative Republicans, not a person who used her position of power to be an anti-democracy election denier,”Brzezinski said. “', 'We hope NBC will reconsider its decision.', 'It goes without saying that she will not be a guest on ‘Morning Joe’ in her capacity as a paid contributor.”', 'Nicolle Wallace, host of MSNBC’s “Deadline: White House,” later joined in the rebuke, saying on her program that the network’s decision to hire McDaniel was nothing short of a potential threat to democracy.', '“NBC News is, either wittingly or unwittingly, teaching election deniers that what they can do stretches well beyond appearing on our air and interviews to peddle lies about the sanctity and integrity of our elections,” Wallace told viewers.', 'Rachel Maddow — the network’s biggest star — later devoted the first half-hour of her prime-time program to the controversy, saying the decision to hire McDaniel was “inexplicable.”', 'Maddow took issue with McDaniel’s long track record of demonizing the news media, labeling the press as “fake news,” and launching ugly attacks on NBC News journalists and MSNBC hosts.', '“We do not take it personally when we get attacked, when they say they want to put us on trial and execute us for treason,” she said.', '“And so I want to associate myself with all my colleagues at MSNBC and NBC News who have voiced loud and principled objections to our company for putting on the payroll someone who hasn’t just attacked us as journalists, but someone who is part of an ongoing project to get rid of our system of government,” she said of McDaniel. “', 'Someone who is still trying to convince Americans that this election stuff doesn’t really work.', 'That this last election wasn’t a real result.', 'That American elections are fraudulent.“', 'The on-air revolt ensnared NBC’s top leaders, including NBCUniversal News Group chair Cesar Conde, NBC News president Rebecca Blumenstein and senior vice president of politics Carrie Budoff Brown, who were responsible for McDaniel’s hiring.', 'MSNBC president Rashida Jones also did not object to the decision, people familiar with the matter said.', 'In the wake of Conde’s announcement to sever ties with McDaniel, MSNBC host Joy Reid and Maddow addressed the reversal on the network’s air, praising the move as “bold” and “strong.”', '“I think it is a show of strength and a show of respect for the people who work at this company and make us who we are,” Maddow said. “', 'That leadership was willing to change on this, I’m grateful to them.”']",-0.0710578434549836,"In the wake of Conde’s announcement to sever ties with McDaniel, MSNBC host Joy Reid and Maddow addressed the reversal on the network’s air, praising the move as “bold” and “strong.”","Maddow took issue with McDaniel’s long track record of demonizing the news media, labeling the press as “fake news,” and launching ugly attacks on NBC News journalists and MSNBC hosts.",-0.4204912036657333,"In the wake of Conde’s announcement to sever ties with McDaniel, MSNBC host Joy Reid and Maddow addressed the reversal on the network’s air, praising the move as “bold” and “strong.”",The reversal comes after journalists and anchors at both NBC and its cable news sibling MSNBC publicly denounced the decision to hire McDaniel as a paid analyst in a stunning and unprecedented on-air rebuke of network brass that has embarrassed the Peacock Network.,2024-05-21 Under Armour is laying off workers as retailer says North America sales will plunge this year,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/under-armour-uaa-earnings-q4-2024.html,2024-05-16T20:14:41+0000,"In this articleUnder Armour announced a broad restructuring plan on Thursday as it said sales in its largest market, North America, plunged 10% and predicted the trend will get worse throughout its current fiscal year. The athletic apparel retailer also saw profits sink by more than 96% during its fiscal fourth quarter, compared with the year-ago period. It's unclear how many employees Under Armour will lay off as part of the restructuring, but the plan is expected to cost between $70 million and $90 million, a portion of which will be used for employee severance and benefits costs. The company declined to share more information with CNBC about its restructuring.The company's shares initially plunged double digits in pre-market trading after its earnings report was released, but later rebounded after its earnings call with Wall Street analysts. Shares closed more than 1% lower. Here's how the athletic apparel retailer did in its fiscal fourth quarter compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:The company's reported net income for the three-month period that ended March 31 was $6.6 million, or 2 cents per share, compared with $170.6 million, or 38 cents per share, a year earlier. Excluding one-time items, the company reported earnings of 11 cents per share. Sales dropped to $1.33 billion, down about 5% from $1.4 billion a year earlier. During the quarter, sales in North America declined 10% to $772 million, worse than the $780 million that analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount. Under Armour said it expects sales to continue to worsen in North America. The company anticipates they will drop between 15% and 17% in its current fiscal year. ""Due to a confluence of factors, including lower wholesale channel demand and inconsistent execution across our business, we are seizing this critical moment to make proactive decisions to build a premium positioning for our brand, which will pressure our top and bottom line in the near term,"" founder and CEO Kevin Plank said in a statement. ""Over the next 18 months, there is a significant opportunity to reconstitute Under Armour's brand strength through achieving more, by doing less and focusing on our core fundamentals,"" he added.Across Under Armour's business, the company is expecting revenue to be down ""at a low-double-digit percentage rate"" in its current fiscal year, while analysts had expected sales to grow by 2.1%, according to LSEG. The company is planning to cut down on promotions and discounting, which it expects will lead its gross margin to rise between 0.75 and 1 percentage point for the fiscal year. It's expecting diluted earnings per share to be between 2 cents and 5 cents and adjusted diluted earnings per share to be between 18 cents and 21 cents for the year. Analysts had expected earnings per share of 52 cents, according to LSEG. Under Armour's rough quarter comes about two months after the retailer announced former Marriott executive Stephanie Linnartz would be stepping down from her role as CEO after barely a year on the job and Plank would once again take the helm of the company he founded in 1996. Linnartz was the second CEO the company has cycled through in less than two years. During a call with analysts, Plank was blunt about where things had gone wrong for Under Armour. He pointed to inconsistent leadership as one of the primary issues.""With several CEOs and heads of products, marketing and North America over the past half decade, ongoing turnover of critical leadership has been central to our inability to stay agile and decisive,"" said Plank.Linnartz was hired on a bet that her experience building out Marriott's renowned Bonvoy loyalty program and driving digital revenue for the hotel giant would offset her lack of experience in the retail industry. Before her departure, she managed to overhaul Under Armour's C-suite and build out its loyalty program. She was attempting to pivot the brand's assortment to a more athleisure-focused offering that had more stylish options for women, who tend to spend more on clothes and shoes than men do.Now Plank is looking to undo some of that work. He told analysts that the company had ""taken our eyes off"" its core men's apparel business, which has ""significantly impacted"" the brand's perception and led it to become ""more promotional and commoditized.""""We will rectify this,"" said Plank. ""This focus does not mean that we are deprioritizing our footwear or women's business per se but from a sequencing perspective, men's apparel will be our highest priority.""As Plank tries to reset the business, he said Under Armour plans to reduce its style counts by roughly 25% over the next 18 months and cut down the amount of time it takes to get a product from an idea to a showroom floor. He aims to streamline the process so it'll only take between 6 and12 months instead of the 18 months it currently takes — a system he called ""just plain uncompetitive in the 2024 landscape.""The full restructuring will focus on streamlining Under Armour's overall business, reducing silos and ensuring that every staffer's work is directly contributing to its primary goal: ""Selling more shirts and shoes.""""We are simply doing too much stuff. There are too many products, too many initiatives, too much of too much,"" said Plank. ""To reconstitute this brand, we must be highly focused and prioritize what needs to get done so that our teams know exactly what to do with a clear definition of success.""Read the full earnings release here.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"['In this articleUnder Armour announced a broad restructuring plan on Thursday as it said sales in its largest market, North America, plunged 10% and predicted the trend will get worse throughout its current fiscal year.', 'The athletic apparel retailer also saw profits sink by more than 96% during its fiscal fourth quarter, compared with the year-ago period.', ""It's unclear how many employees Under Armour will lay off as part of the restructuring, but the plan is expected to cost between $70 million and $90 million, a portion of which will be used for employee severance and benefits costs."", 'The company declined to share more information with CNBC about its restructuring.', ""The company's shares initially plunged double digits in pre-market trading after its earnings report was released, but later rebounded after its earnings call with Wall Street analysts."", 'Shares closed more than 1% lower.', ""Here's how the athletic apparel retailer did in its fiscal fourth quarter compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:The company's reported net income for the three-month period that ended March 31 was $6.6 million, or 2 cents per share, compared with $170.6 million, or 38 cents per share, a year earlier."", 'Excluding one-time items, the company reported earnings of 11 cents per share.', 'Sales dropped to $1.33 billion, down about 5% from $1.4 billion a year earlier.', 'During the quarter, sales in North America declined 10% to $772 million, worse than the $780 million that analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount.', 'Under Armour said it expects sales to continue to worsen in North America.', 'The company anticipates they will drop between 15% and 17% in its current fiscal year.', '""Due to a confluence of factors, including lower wholesale channel demand and inconsistent execution across our business, we are seizing this critical moment to make proactive decisions to build a premium positioning for our brand, which will pressure our top and bottom line in the near term,"" founder and CEO Kevin Plank said in a statement.', '""Over the next 18 months, there is a significant opportunity to reconstitute Under Armour\'s brand strength through achieving more, by doing less and focusing on our core fundamentals,"" he added.', 'Across Under Armour\'s business, the company is expecting revenue to be down ""at a low-double-digit percentage rate"" in its current fiscal year, while analysts had expected sales to grow by 2.1%, according to LSEG.The company is planning to cut down on promotions and discounting, which it expects will lead its gross margin to rise between 0.75 and 1 percentage point for the fiscal year.', ""It's expecting diluted earnings per share to be between 2 cents and 5 cents and adjusted diluted earnings per share to be between 18 cents and 21 cents for the year."", ""Analysts had expected earnings per share of 52 cents, according to LSEG.Under Armour's rough quarter comes about two months after the retailer announced former Marriott executive Stephanie Linnartz would be stepping down from her role as CEO after barely a year on the job and Plank would once again take the helm of the company he founded in 1996.Linnartz was the second CEO the company has cycled through in less than two years."", 'During a call with analysts, Plank was blunt about where things had gone wrong for Under Armour.', 'He pointed to inconsistent leadership as one of the primary issues.', '""With several CEOs and heads of products, marketing and North America over the past half decade, ongoing turnover of critical leadership has been central to our inability to stay agile and decisive,"" said Plank.', ""Linnartz was hired on a bet that her experience building out Marriott's renowned Bonvoy loyalty program and driving digital revenue for the hotel giant would offset her lack of experience in the retail industry."", ""Before her departure, she managed to overhaul Under Armour's C-suite and build out its loyalty program."", ""She was attempting to pivot the brand's assortment to a more athleisure-focused offering that had more stylish options for women, who tend to spend more on clothes and shoes than men do."", 'Now Plank is looking to undo some of that work.', 'He told analysts that the company had ""taken our eyes off"" its core men\'s apparel business, which has ""significantly impacted"" the brand\'s perception and led it to become ""more promotional and commoditized.', '""""We will rectify this,"" said Plank. ""', ""This focus does not mean that we are deprioritizing our footwear or women's business per se but from a sequencing perspective, men's apparel will be our highest priority."", '""As Plank tries to reset the business, he said Under Armour plans to reduce its style counts by roughly 25% over the next 18 months and cut down the amount of time it takes to get a product from an idea to a showroom floor.', 'He aims to streamline the process so it\'ll only take between 6 and12 months instead of the 18 months it currently takes — a system he called ""just plain uncompetitive in the 2024 landscape.', '""The full restructuring will focus on streamlining Under Armour\'s overall business, reducing silos and ensuring that every staffer\'s work is directly contributing to its primary goal: ""Selling more shirts and shoes.', '""""We are simply doing too much stuff.', 'There are too many products, too many initiatives, too much of too much,"" said Plank. ""', 'To reconstitute this brand, we must be highly focused and prioritize what needs to get done so that our teams know exactly what to do with a clear definition of success.', '""Read the full earnings release here.']",0.0605298505650281,"To reconstitute this brand, we must be highly focused and prioritize what needs to get done so that our teams know exactly what to do with a clear definition of success.","Across Under Armour's business, the company is expecting revenue to be down ""at a low-double-digit percentage rate"" in its current fiscal year, while analysts had expected sales to grow by 2.1%, according to LSEG.The company is planning to cut down on promotions and discounting, which it expects will lead its gross margin to rise between 0.75 and 1 percentage point for the fiscal year.",-0.484110727196648,"""Over the next 18 months, there is a significant opportunity to reconstitute Under Armour's brand strength through achieving more, by doing less and focusing on our core fundamentals,"" he added.","During the quarter, sales in North America declined 10% to $772 million, worse than the $780 million that analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount.",2024-05-21 Are consumers pulling back on spending? It depends on which CEO you ask,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/20/consumer-pullback-ceos.html,2024-05-20T17:30:25+0000,"In this articleWith higher prices and elevated interest rates stubbornly sticking around, Chipotle burrito bowls and European vacations are still on the table for many consumers. But Big Macs and kitchen remodels aren't.The most recent round of quarterly earnings reports helped to sort companies into largely two camps: McDonald's, Starbucks and Home Depot were among the consumer-centric companies that surprised investors with weaker-than-expected results, saying customers had pulled back on their spending. Others, like Sweetgreen and Delta Air Lines, bucked the trend and reported growth.The takeaway? Consumers have become more selective about how and where they spend their dollars.""Consumers continue to be even more discriminating with every dollar that they spend as they faced elevated prices in their day-to-day spending,"" McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinski said on the company's conference call in late April.For more than two years, consumers have dealt with sharply rising prices. This year, most companies expect that their pricing strategies will return to their pre-pandemic approaches, thanks to stabilizing commodity prices. But that doesn't mean the actual prices seen on grocery store shelves or restaurant menus will fall, and shoppers are feeling that pinch.The consumer price index rose 3.4% over the last 12 months through April, according to Department of Labor data. On Tuesday, a day before the monthly CPI report, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell reiterated that inflation is falling more slowly than expected, which likely means the central bank won't be cutting interest rates anytime soon.Making matters worse, many consumers have run through the savings they accumulated during the pandemic when they were collecting stimulus checks in place of traveling. Instead, many are paying their everyday bills with credit cards as they face higher costs for gas, rent and groceries. The average consumer owes $6,218 on their credit cards, up 8.5% year over year, according to a TransUnion quarterly report out last week.Aurelia Concepcion, 57, a case manager in New York, said she is planning only essential travel this year, drawing the line at visiting family in Georgia and Ohio.""Everything is too high ... taxis, rent."" Concepcion says she avoids restaurants: ""It's too expensive. I'd rather prepare my own food.""Concepcion isn't the only consumer changing spending habits. Executives have been warning about a more cautious spending environment for awhile. But it's finally starting to show up in some companies' quarterly results.KFC, Pizza Hut and Starbucks were among the restaurant companies that reported declining same-store sales in the most recent quarter. Home Depot's revenue was weaker than expected because potential customers are putting off renovations until interest rates fall, executives said. And Apple iPhone sales fell 10% in the tech company's latest quarter, suggesting consumers weren't upgrading to the latest version of the smartphone in the patterns that they have in the past.""Some of the things that have seen the biggest run-up in prices over the last few years are items that confront people on a daily basis: the cost of eating out, the cost of groceries and the costs of fuel and gasoline and rents,"" said Columbia Business School economics professor Brett House. ""Regardless of whether inflation is slowing amongst those goods, even with lower inflation, prices remain very high, and people get a daily reminder of that.""Big-box giant Walmart said last Thursday that shoppers are prioritizing buying food and health-related items over general merchandise, like home goods and electronics. The retailer has reported that trend for several quarters now. Finance chief John David Rainey told CNBC that Walmart's grocery business has gotten a boost from the widening gap between restaurant prices and the cost of cooking at home. Lower-income consumers are struggling more than other demographics. They couldn't save as much during the pandemic, and evidence suggests that they've exhausted those savings, according to House. On top of that, rent prices have surged, and low-income consumers are more likely to rent than own.PepsiCo, for one, particularly called out a weaker low-income consumer. The Gatorade owner saw volume for its North American beverage business fall 5% in the quarter.""The lower-income consumer in the U.S. is stretched ... [and] is strategizing a lot to make their budgets get to the end of the month,"" CEO Ramon Laguarta told analysts on the company's conference call in April.Pepsi is leaning into promotions and discounts to lure back the low-income shopper. Other companies are similarly hoping deals will attract more customers. McDonald's, king of the low-price fas-food segment, plans to start offering a $5 value meal on June 25.While some CEOs have said that consumers are growing more cautious, others — like those in the airline industry — have celebrated strong and persistent spending.""Consumers continue to prioritize travel as a discretionary investment in themselves,"" Ed Bastian, CEO of Delta Air Lines, the most profitable U.S. carrier, said in an interview in April.Delta and its rival United last month each forecast earnings ahead of analysts' estimates for the second quarter. Both carriers offer sprawling global networks and have benefited from a rebound in international travel in the wake of the pandemic, particularly to Europe and popular destinations in Asia for U.S. travelers like Japan. Both carriers have predicted record summer travel demand.Those airline trends align with a broader consumer shift that started after pandemic lockdowns: spending more money on experiences rather than apparel or electronics.""We're still spending disproportionately on activities and services rather than on goods,"" House said.Delta and United are also capitalizing on travelers who have been willing to pay up for more expensive seats, like first class or premium economy. U.S. airlines have been racing to add more high-priced seating to their planes and grow lounges for top spenders. Inflation hasn't hurt high-income consumers as much as it has the budget-conscious, giving them more room to spend.Higher-income consumers have also bolstered fast-casual restaurant chains, like Chipotle, that come in at a slightly higher price point than the cheapest options. The burrito chain's same-store sales grew 7% during the first quarter, fueled by a 5.4% increase in foot traffic. Chipotle has a strong perception of value among diners, CEO Brian Niccol said on the company's conference call. Executives have also previously emphasized that most of its customers come from higher-income brackets.Even Walmart have been attracting consumers with deeper pockets. As customers pay more for groceries, the discounter has attracted more affluent customers and stolen market share from rivals like Target, which has historically been more popular with wealthier shoppers. The company also credited its remodeled stores and expanded merchandise on its website for appealing to households that have a more than $100,000 annual income. Target is scheduled to report quarterly earnings on Wednesday. Not all companies with higher-income customer bases have seen the same strong demand, however. Corporate misfires can also lead to disappointing sales, even if their shoppers aren't necessarily pulling back on their spending.For example, athleisure brand Lululemon's U.S. sales lagged in its most recent quarter, which CEO Calvin McDonald attributed in part to a shortage in key product sizes and not enough colorful items.Then there's Starbucks, which has always positioned itself as a premium coffee brand. The coffee giant announced a surprise decline in its U.S. same-store sales and lowered its full-year forecast, sending its shares tumbling. While CEO Laxman Narasimhan gave a laundry list of factors explaining the weak quarter, including a more value-minded consumer, Bank of America analyst Sara Senatore wrote in a research note that a social media boycott might still be the primary culprit.And Peloton's latest report was the latest in a string of disappointing results for the company. Earlier this month, the pandemic darling fired its chief executive and announced plans to lay off 15% of its staff as fewer consumers bought its pricey equipment or its much cheaper fitness subscriptions in its latest fiscal quarter.""With the economic outlook for consumers unlikely to improve across the balance of this year, Peloton's trajectory on the product front is unlikely to change course ... But worryingly, app subscriptions are also under pressure – most likely because consumers are reviewing their expenses more carefully as they suffer from subscription fatigue,"" GlobalData managing director Neil Saunders said in emailed comments.— CNBC's Melissa Repko and Gabrielle Fonrouge contributed reporting to this story.",CNBC,20/05/2024,"['In this articleWith higher prices and elevated interest rates stubbornly sticking around, Chipotle burrito bowls and European vacations are still on the table for many consumers.', ""But Big Macs and kitchen remodels aren't."", ""The most recent round of quarterly earnings reports helped to sort companies into largely two camps: McDonald's, Starbucks and Home Depot were among the consumer-centric companies that surprised investors with weaker-than-expected results, saying customers had pulled back on their spending."", 'Others, like Sweetgreen and Delta Air Lines, bucked the trend and reported growth.', 'The takeaway?', 'Consumers have become more selective about how and where they spend their dollars.', '""Consumers continue to be even more discriminating with every dollar that they spend as they faced elevated prices in their day-to-day spending,"" McDonald\'s CEO Chris Kempczinski said on the company\'s conference call in late April.', 'For more than two years, consumers have dealt with sharply rising prices.', 'This year, most companies expect that their pricing strategies will return to their pre-pandemic approaches, thanks to stabilizing commodity prices.', ""But that doesn't mean the actual prices seen on grocery store shelves or restaurant menus will fall, and shoppers are feeling that pinch."", 'The consumer price index rose 3.4% over the last 12 months through April, according to Department of Labor data.', ""On Tuesday, a day before the monthly CPI report, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell reiterated that inflation is falling more slowly than expected, which likely means the central bank won't be cutting interest rates anytime soon."", 'Making matters worse, many consumers have run through the savings they accumulated during the pandemic when they were collecting stimulus checks in place of traveling.', 'Instead, many are paying their everyday bills with credit cards as they face higher costs for gas, rent and groceries.', 'The average consumer owes $6,218 on their credit cards, up 8.5% year over year, according to a TransUnion quarterly report out last week.', 'Aurelia Concepcion, 57, a case manager in New York, said she is planning only essential travel this year, drawing the line at visiting family in Georgia and Ohio.', '""Everything is too high ... taxis, rent.""', 'Concepcion says she avoids restaurants: ""It\'s too expensive.', ""I'd rather prepare my own food."", '""Concepcion isn\'t the only consumer changing spending habits.', 'Executives have been warning about a more cautious spending environment for awhile.', ""But it's finally starting to show up in some companies' quarterly results."", 'KFC, Pizza Hut and Starbucks were among the restaurant companies that reported declining same-store sales in the most recent quarter.', ""Home Depot's revenue was weaker than expected because potential customers are putting off renovations until interest rates fall, executives said."", ""And Apple iPhone sales fell 10% in the tech company's latest quarter, suggesting consumers weren't upgrading to the latest version of the smartphone in the patterns that they have in the past."", '""Some of the things that have seen the biggest run-up in prices over the last few years are items that confront people on a daily basis: the cost of eating out, the cost of groceries and the costs of fuel and gasoline and rents,"" said Columbia Business School economics professor Brett House. ""', 'Regardless of whether inflation is slowing amongst those goods, even with lower inflation, prices remain very high, and people get a daily reminder of that.', '""Big-box giant Walmart said last Thursday that shoppers are prioritizing buying food and health-related items over general merchandise, like home goods and electronics.', 'The retailer has reported that trend for several quarters now.', ""Finance chief John David Rainey told CNBC that Walmart's grocery business has gotten a boost from the widening gap between restaurant prices and the cost of cooking at home."", 'Lower-income consumers are struggling more than other demographics.', ""They couldn't save as much during the pandemic, and evidence suggests that they've exhausted those savings, according to House."", 'On top of that, rent prices have surged, and low-income consumers are more likely to rent than own.', 'PepsiCo, for one, particularly called out a weaker low-income consumer.', 'The Gatorade owner saw volume for its North American beverage business fall 5% in the quarter.', '""The lower-income consumer in the U.S. is stretched ... [and] is strategizing a lot to make their budgets get to the end of the month,"" CEO Ramon Laguarta told analysts on the company\'s conference call in April.', 'Pepsi is leaning into promotions and discounts to lure back the low-income shopper.', 'Other companies are similarly hoping deals will attract more customers.', ""McDonald's, king of the low-price fas-food segment, plans to start offering a $5 value meal on June 25.While some CEOs have said that consumers are growing more cautious, others — like those in the airline industry — have celebrated strong and persistent spending."", '""Consumers continue to prioritize travel as a discretionary investment in themselves,"" Ed Bastian, CEO of Delta Air Lines, the most profitable U.S. carrier, said in an interview in April.', ""Delta and its rival United last month each forecast earnings ahead of analysts' estimates for the second quarter."", 'Both carriers offer sprawling global networks and have benefited from a rebound in international travel in the wake of the pandemic, particularly to Europe and popular destinations in Asia for U.S. travelers like Japan.', 'Both carriers have predicted record summer travel demand.', 'Those airline trends align with a broader consumer shift that started after pandemic lockdowns: spending more money on experiences rather than apparel or electronics.', '""We\'re still spending disproportionately on activities and services rather than on goods,"" House said.', 'Delta and United are also capitalizing on travelers who have been willing to pay up for more expensive seats, like first class or premium economy.', 'U.S. airlines have been racing to add more high-priced seating to their planes and grow lounges for top spenders.', ""Inflation hasn't hurt high-income consumers as much as it has the budget-conscious, giving them more room to spend."", 'Higher-income consumers have also bolstered fast-casual restaurant chains, like Chipotle, that come in at a slightly higher price point than the cheapest options.', ""The burrito chain's same-store sales grew7% during the first quarter, fueled by a 5.4% increase in foot traffic."", ""Chipotle has a strong perception of value among diners, CEO Brian Niccol said on the company's conference call."", 'Executives have also previously emphasized that most of its customers come from higher-income brackets.', 'Even Walmart have beenattracting consumers with deeper pockets.', 'As customers pay more for groceries, the discounterhasattracted moreaffluent customers and stolen market share from rivalslikeTarget, which has historically been more popular with wealthier shoppers.', 'The company also credited its remodeled stores and expanded merchandise on its website for appealing to households that have a more than $100,000 annual income.', 'Target is scheduled to report quarterly earnings on Wednesday.', 'Not all companies with higher-income customer bases have seen the same strong demand, however.', ""Corporate misfires can also lead to disappointing sales, even if their shoppers aren't necessarily pulling back on their spending."", ""For example, athleisure brand Lululemon's U.S. sales lagged in its most recent quarter, which CEO Calvin McDonald attributed in part to a shortage in key product sizes and not enough colorful items."", ""Then there's Starbucks, which has always positioned itself as a premium coffee brand."", 'The coffee giant announced a surprise decline in its U.S. same-store sales and lowered its full-year forecast, sending its shares tumbling.', 'While CEO Laxman Narasimhan gave a laundry list of factors explaining the weak quarter, including a more value-minded consumer, Bank of America analyst Sara Senatore wrote in a research note that a social media boycott might still be the primary culprit.', ""And Peloton's latest report was the latest in a string of disappointing results for the company."", 'Earlier this month, the pandemic darling fired its chief executive and announced plans to lay off 15% of its staff as fewer consumers bought its pricey equipment or its much cheaper fitness subscriptions in its latest fiscal quarter.', '""With the economic outlook for consumers unlikely to improve across the balance of this year, Peloton\'s trajectory on the product front is unlikely to change course ... But worryingly, app subscriptions are also under pressure – most likely because consumers are reviewing their expenses more carefully as they suffer from subscription fatigue,"" GlobalData managing director Neil Saunders said in emailed comments.—', ""CNBC's Melissa Repko and Gabrielle Fonrouge contributed reporting to this story.""]",0.0637336559460311,"McDonald's, king of the low-price fas-food segment, plans to start offering a $5 value meal on June 25.While some CEOs have said that consumers are growing more cautious, others — like those in the airline industry — have celebrated strong and persistent spending.","""With the economic outlook for consumers unlikely to improve across the balance of this year, Peloton's trajectory on the product front is unlikely to change course ... But worryingly, app subscriptions are also under pressure – most likely because consumers are reviewing their expenses more carefully as they suffer from subscription fatigue,"" GlobalData managing director Neil Saunders said in emailed comments.—",-0.0166200759510199,"The average consumer owes $6,218 on their credit cards, up 8.5% year over year, according to a TransUnion quarterly report out last week.","Home Depot's revenue was weaker than expected because potential customers are putting off renovations until interest rates fall, executives said.",2024-05-21 The Chevrolet Corvette is officially going electric,https://edition.cnn.com/2022/04/25/business/electric-hybrid-corvette/index.html," Updated 12:22 PM EDT, Mon April 25, 2022 ","General Motors will produce a fully electric Chevrolet Corvette, GM President Mark Reuss announced in a LinkedIn post Monday morning. Reuss didn’t say when the electric Corvette would come, but he hinted that a hybrid model could come relatively soon. “We will offer an electrified Corvette as early as next year,” he wrote. An accompanying video the company posted to Twitter showed what appeared to be a hybrid Corvette, and in another first, showed the front wheels spinning and throwing snow as if being powered. All Corvettes produced by the company previously have been rear-wheel-drive only. While Reuss’s post implies a hybrid Corvette will be based on the current generation of the car, it’s not clear if the all-electric version will be a variation of this car or a completely different future model. “Electrified” is an auto industry term encompassing everything from hybrid to fully electric vehicles, and anything with an electric motor can count as “electrified.” It has long been rumored that the current generation of the Corvette, the first with its gasoline engine mounted behind the seats instead of in the front, could be built with a hybrid system. Reuss has also previously hinted there would be electrified variants of the car. Various companies are working on electric sports cars. Most all-electric vehicles in production so far have been four-door sedans and SUVs, as the need for batteries lends itself to larger and heavier vehicles. Tesla’s first car, the Lotus Elise-based Tesla Roadster, was an electric sports car, but the second-generation of Tesla Roadster, originally unveiled as a prototype in 2017, has yet to go into production. Some manufacturers, such as Lamborghini, have said that current battery technology doesn’t allow for a optimum sports car performance from a purely electric vehicle. Lamborghini has been working on plug-in hybrid sports cars, though. To date, the Corvette is only available in the base Stingray version with 6.2-liter V8 engine producing up to 495 horsepower. A 670 horsepower Corvette Z06 with a 5.5-liter V8 was unveiled last fall. The previous generation of the Corvette included included a 755-horsepower ZR1 version. Nothing like that has yet been announced for the current model but GM engineers have said a major reason for putting the engine in the back was to allow for better performance at extremely high horsepower levels. Besides saving gas, hybrid systems can also be used in high-performance cars to add additional power and to provide for quicker acceleration since electric motors can provide power to the wheels more quickly than gas engines. Ferrari’s most powerful sports cars are hybrids, for instance. GM has said it plans to produce only zero-emission vehicles, meaning fully electric or powered by hydrogen fuel cells, by 2035.",CNN,25/04/2022,"['General Motors will produce a fully electric Chevrolet Corvette, GM President Mark Reuss announced in a LinkedIn post Monday morning.', 'Reuss didn’t say when the electric Corvette would come, but he hinted that a hybrid model could come relatively soon. “', 'We will offer an electrified Corvette as early as next year,” he wrote.', 'An accompanying video the company posted to Twitter showed what appeared to be a hybrid Corvette, and in another first, showed the front wheels spinning and throwing snow as if being powered.', 'All Corvettes produced by the company previously have been rear-wheel-drive only.', 'While Reuss’s post implies a hybrid Corvette will be based on the current generation of the car, it’s not clear if the all-electric version will be a variation of this car or a completely different future model.', '“Electrified” is an auto industry term encompassing everything from hybrid to fully electric vehicles, and anything with an electric motor can count as “electrified.”', 'It has long been rumored that the current generation of the Corvette, the first with its gasoline engine mounted behind the seats instead of in the front, could be built with a hybrid system.', 'Reuss has also previously hinted there would be electrified variants of the car.', 'Various companies are working on electric sports cars.', 'Most all-electric vehicles in production so far have been four-door sedans and SUVs, as the need for batteries lends itself to larger and heavier vehicles.', 'Tesla’s first car, the Lotus Elise-based Tesla Roadster, was an electric sports car, but the second-generation of Tesla Roadster, originally unveiled as a prototype in 2017, has yet to go into production.', 'Some manufacturers, such as Lamborghini, have said that current battery technology doesn’t allow for a optimum sports car performance from a purely electric vehicle.', 'Lamborghini has been working on plug-in hybrid sports cars, though.', 'To date, the Corvette is only available in the base Stingray version with 6.2-liter V8 engine producing up to 495 horsepower.', 'A 670 horsepower Corvette Z06 with a 5.5-liter V8 was unveiled last fall.', 'The previous generation of the Corvette included included a 755-horsepower ZR1 version.', 'Nothing like that has yet been announced for the current model but GM engineers have said a major reason for putting the engine in the back was to allow for better performance at extremely high horsepower levels.', 'Besides saving gas, hybrid systems can also be used in high-performance cars to add additional power and to provide for quicker acceleration since electric motors can provide power to the wheels more quickly than gas engines.', 'Ferrari’s most powerful sports cars are hybrids, for instance.', 'GM has said it plans to produce only zero-emission vehicles, meaning fully electric or powered by hydrogen fuel cells, by 2035.']",0.0521320736918344,Nothing like that has yet been announced for the current model but GM engineers have said a major reason for putting the engine in the back was to allow for better performance at extremely high horsepower levels.,"While Reuss’s post implies a hybrid Corvette will be based on the current generation of the car, it’s not clear if the all-electric version will be a variation of this car or a completely different future model.",0.3646016319592793,"Besides saving gas, hybrid systems can also be used in high-performance cars to add additional power and to provide for quicker acceleration since electric motors can provide power to the wheels more quickly than gas engines.","Some manufacturers, such as Lamborghini, have said that current battery technology doesn’t allow for a optimum sports car performance from a purely electric vehicle.",2024-05-21 Jamie Dimon could step down sooner than expected. Here’s who could run the country’s biggest bank,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/21/investing/jamie-dimon-jpmorgan-succession-plan/index.html," Published 11:51 AM EDT, Tue May 21, 2024 ","JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon has bumped up his retirement plans, the longtime head of America’s largest bank said Monday. Dimon is one of the most well-known and closely listened to CEOs in the world. Over the course of his tenure at JPMorgan Chase, he’s become somewhat synonymous with the largest US bank by assets. But Dimon can’t lead forever, and at 68 years old, the question of succession has grown more important. The timetable for stepping down — which he has long joked was “five years away” any time the question was put to him — is “not five years anymore,” Dimon said at the bank’s investor conference this week. Dimon, who has led the bank since 2006, said that while “I still have the energy I’ve always had, I think when I can’t put on the jersey or any given full thing, I should leave.” Succession plans at the bank, he said, are “well on the way.” Shares of the company’s stock sold off after Dimon’s announcement, closing 4.3% lower. “We believe that it will take time for the street to gain comfort with the next CEO and [Monday’s] stock reaction was evidence of that (if one was needed),” wrote Bank of America analysts in a note on Tuesday. “Dimon has delivered unparalleled shareholder returns during his tenure as CEO while navigating the bank through some major macro-economic crises.” The Bank of America analysts forecast that Dimon will step down in late 2025 or 2026, but the specifics of JPMorgan’s succession plans have been the subject of speculation on Wall Street for many years. Earlier this year, some of the bank’s top executives were moved into new roles in order to expand their experience. The bank appointed Marianne Lake as the sole CEO of the consumer division, an area previously run by both Lake and Jennifer Piepszak. Piepszak, meanwhile, now leads the company’s newly combined commercial and investment bank with her co-CEO Troy Rohrbaugh. Rohrbaugh is the former head of trading and securities services for the bank. Other potential successors include Mary Erdoes, CEO of asset and wealth management; chief financial officer Jeremy Barnum and president and chief operating officer Daniel Pinto. In 2020, Dimon experienced an “acute aortic dissection” — a tear in the inner lining of the aorta blood vessel — requiring surgery. Then co-COOs Gordon Smith and Daniel Pinto lead the company in his absence. Smith retired from the bank in January 2022. Dimon underwent treatment for throat cancer in 2014. In an interview with CNN, he spoke about how being diagnosed with cancer changed his outlook on life. “Everyone knows they’re going to die, but at one point it’s right here and you realize it’s true and it’s true maybe sooner than you think,” Dimon said. “And so it’s nice to end every day by saying, ‘That was a good day.’ Every meeting, that was a good meeting. Every week, that was a good week.” As for what’s next, Dimon says he hasn’t entirely ruled out a future in politics. Last spring he told Bloomberg, “I love my country, and maybe one day I’ll serve my country in one capacity or another.”",CNN,21/05/2024,"['JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon has bumped up his retirement plans, the longtime head of America’s largest bank said Monday.', 'Dimon is one of the most well-known and closely listened to CEOs in the world.', 'Over the course of his tenure at JPMorgan Chase, he’s become somewhat synonymous with the largest US bank by assets.', 'But Dimon can’t lead forever, and at 68 years old, the question of succession has grown more important.', 'The timetable for stepping down — which he has long joked was “five years away” any time the question was put to him — is “not five years anymore,” Dimon said at the bank’s investor conference this week.', 'Dimon, who has led the bank since 2006, said that while “I still have the energy I’ve always had, I think when I can’t put on the jersey or any given full thing, I should leave.”', 'Succession plans at the bank, he said, are “well on the way.”', 'Shares of the company’s stock sold off after Dimon’s announcement, closing 4.3% lower.', '“We believe that it will take time for the street to gain comfort with the next CEO and [Monday’s] stock reaction was evidence of that (if one was needed),” wrote Bank of America analysts in a note on Tuesday.', '“Dimonhas delivered unparalleled shareholder returns during his tenure as CEO while navigating the bank through some major macro-economic crises.”', 'The Bank of America analysts forecast that Dimon will step down in late 2025 or 2026, but the specifics of JPMorgan’s succession plans have been the subject of speculation on Wall Street for many years.', 'Earlier this year, some of the bank’s top executives were moved into new roles in order to expand their experience.', 'The bank appointed Marianne Lake as the sole CEO of the consumer division, an area previously run by both Lake and Jennifer Piepszak.', 'Piepszak, meanwhile, now leads the company’s newly combined commercial and investment bank with her co-CEO Troy Rohrbaugh.', 'Rohrbaugh is the former head of trading and securities services for the bank.', 'Other potential successors include Mary Erdoes, CEO of asset and wealth management; chief financial officer Jeremy Barnum and president and chief operating officer Daniel Pinto.', 'In 2020, Dimon experienced an “acute aortic dissection” — a tear in the inner lining of the aorta blood vessel — requiring surgery.', 'Then co-COOs Gordon Smith and Daniel Pinto lead the company in his absence.', 'Smith retired from the bank in January 2022.', 'Dimonunderwent treatmentfor throat cancer in 2014.', 'In an interview with CNN, he spoke about how being diagnosed with cancer changed his outlook on life.', '“Everyone knows they’re going to die, but at one point it’s right here and you realize it’s true and it’s true maybe sooner than you think,” Dimon said. “', 'And so it’s nice to end every day by saying, ‘That was a good day.’', 'Every meeting, that was a good meeting.', 'Every week, that was a good week.”', 'As for what’s next, Dimon says he hasn’t entirely ruled out a future in politics.', 'Last springhe told Bloomberg, “I love my country, and maybe one day I’ll serve my country in one capacity or another.”']",0.2324663907728094,"Other potential successors include Mary Erdoes, CEO of asset and wealth management; chief financial officer Jeremy Barnum and president and chief operating officer Daniel Pinto.",Dimonunderwent treatmentfor throat cancer in 2014.,0.7449797466397285,"JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon has bumped up his retirement plans, the longtime head of America’s largest bank said Monday.","Shares of the company’s stock sold off after Dimon’s announcement, closing 4.3% lower.",2024-05-21 Caitlin Clark just did something no athlete has done since Michael Jordan,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/21/business/caitlin-clark-wilson-basketball-deal/index.html," Published 11:01 AM EDT, Tue May 21, 2024 ","Breakout basketball star Caitlin Clark has a new achievement that hasn’t been accomplished since Michael Jordan. The WNBA player signed a multiyear deal with Wilson Sporting Goods Co., the league’s official basketball supplier, for “signature basketball collections celebrating Clark’s continued legacy,” the company announced Tuesday. Wilson said that Clark will “test, advise and provide feedback on a range” of its basketball products, become a brand ambassador and release new collections that celebrate her throughout the rest of 2024. In addition, she will “creatively direct her first-ever signature basketball line” that will roll out later this year. Financial terms of the deal were not released. She’s the first-ever female athlete to have her own collection with Wilson, a company spokesperson told CNN, with the series being built similar to Jordan’s collection in the 1980s, which included signature basketballs. “Wilson has been with me across some of the most pivotal moments in my career so far, and I couldn’t be more excited to continue driving basketball forward alongside them,” Clark said in a press release. “It feels surreal to have my own basketball collection, and to affect what that means for future generations of athletes.” The first collection released Tuesday on Wilson’s website, with a limited collection of gold-colored basketballs featuring a drawing of Clark along with her signature. Wilson, which has produced the basketballs for the NBA for several decades, became the official game ball of the WNBA in 2020. The company also sells basketballs with WNBA team logos on them. Clark, the no. 1 draft pick, joined the Indiana Fever earlier this month and has been a boon for the league since: Her debut drew an average of 2.1 million viewers on ESPN2, ESPN+ and Disney+, making it the most watched WNBA game in more than two decades. Nike is also reportedly on the verge of signing Clark to design her shoe line, but no official deal has been formally announced. She also has sponsorship deals with State Farm, Gatorade, Panini and others, valued at around $3 million.",CNN,21/05/2024,"['Breakout basketball star Caitlin Clark has a new achievement that hasn’t been accomplished since Michael Jordan.', 'The WNBA player signed a multiyear deal with Wilson Sporting Goods Co., the league’s official basketball supplier, for “signature basketball collections celebrating Clark’s continued legacy,” the company announced Tuesday.', 'Wilson said that Clark will “test, advise and provide feedback on a range” of its basketball products, become a brand ambassador and release new collections that celebrate her throughout the rest of 2024.', 'In addition, she will “creatively direct her first-ever signature basketball line” that will roll out later this year.', 'Financial terms of the deal were not released.', 'She’s the first-ever female athlete to have her own collection with Wilson, a company spokesperson told CNN, with the series being built similar to Jordan’s collection in the 1980s, which included signature basketballs.', '“Wilsonhas been with me across some of the most pivotal moments in my career so far, and I couldn’t be more excited to continue driving basketball forward alongside them,” Clark said in a press release. “', 'It feels surreal to have my own basketball collection, and to affect what that means for future generations of athletes.”', 'The first collection released Tuesday on Wilson’s website, with a limited collection of gold-colored basketballs featuring a drawing of Clark along with her signature.', 'Wilson, which has produced the basketballs for the NBA for several decades, became the official game ball of the WNBA in 2020.', 'The company also sells basketballs with WNBA team logos on them.', 'Clark, the no.', '1 draft pick, joined the Indiana Fever earlier this month and has been a boon for the league since: Her debut drew an average of 2.1 million viewers on ESPN2, ESPN+ and Disney+, making it the most watched WNBA game in more than two decades.', 'Nike is also reportedly on the verge of signing Clark to design her shoe line, but no official deal has been formally announced.', 'She also has sponsorship deals with State Farm, Gatorade, Panini and others,valuedat around $3 million.']",0.0934750840559382,"The WNBA player signed a multiyear deal with Wilson Sporting Goods Co., the league’s official basketball supplier, for “signature basketball collections celebrating Clark’s continued legacy,” the company announced Tuesday.","Nike is also reportedly on the verge of signing Clark to design her shoe line, but no official deal has been formally announced.",0.8845897912979126,"1 draft pick, joined the Indiana Fever earlier this month and has been a boon for the league since: Her debut drew an average of 2.1 million viewers on ESPN2, ESPN+ and Disney+, making it the most watched WNBA game in more than two decades.",,2024-05-21 "Why is Slough, near London, Europe's largest data centre hub?",https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cyrl7nlnkjpo,2024-05-21T05:21:22.787Z,"The town of Slough in Berkshire, just outside London, has had a terrible press over the years. Many will put that down to the British sitcom The Office, yet even before that in 1937 the poet John Betjeman wrote ""Come friendly bombs and fall on Slough!"". But that is perhaps changing. With its direct transport links to London, close proximity to Heathrow Airport and fast fibre optic connections, it is said to be perfectly placed for a hi-tech revolution. According to the Slough and South Bucks Observer, the town has ""Europe’s largest collection of data centres"", with 34 currently based there and more on the way. Demand for data centres has been growing ever since the internet took off. According to the local newspaper, Slough, which is just outside the M25 and is less than 10 miles away from Heathrow, welcomed its first data centre in 2005. Slough Trading Estate is now considered to be the largest data centre hub in Europe. For those who don't know, these data centres are where pretty much anything on your phone or computer is stored - the Cloud, websites, social media, pictures, music and more. Many of London's banks and emergency services use Slough's data centres. But this is a secretive and highly sensitive world where security is not unsurprisingly paramount. Many data centres do not want media attention and politely declined our requests to go inside them. Even the actual number of data centres in Slough is difficult to pin down. Slough Borough Council says there is ""no definitive record source"" to identify the number of data centres in the borough but it is estimated to be about 30 to 35. So when we were invited in by Virgin Media O2, it was a rare opportunity to see inside a data centre. Tom Finch, a technical site engineer who works in the data centre, says the site is O2's largest mobile data centre in the UK and manages traffic for 3G, 4G and 5G customers. ""You have voice calls, you have texts, you have all of your social media platforms like WhatsApp. Everything you operate on your cellular data on your mobile phone will pass through this data centre,"" he says. He says demand has increased since the rise in home working and thinks Slough benefits from very fast fibre optic connections. ""Slough is on the data highway in the UK. It's far enough outside the capital but through here we have a lot of traffic passing,"" he says. Dan Goodenough, the technical site operations manager, says they have to predict when people want data and demand has gone up since the pandemic. He says they see ""surges in traffic demand, but also the types of traffic"". ""For example it's home working but it's also online gaming, virtual reality, there's different types of traffic that go across our network today than there was 10 years ago,"" he says. ""The most recent Fortnite download for example, we saw massive peaks in the amount of data our customers were downloading. And that's why we invest £10bn in infrastructure to make sure we can provide the best service."" So why Slough? According to the website datacenters.com, the advantages of Slough are its strategic location with excellent transport links to London. The proximity of Heathrow is also an advantage. It says the Slough data centre market offers a number of size facilities to allow expansion. And Slough also has very robust and fast fibre optic broadband connectivity. It is situated on the main fibre optic line between London and the US. The borough council says being on the main cabling running out of London to Ireland and the US is an advantage. It says it was the capital's banks that helped create this data centre hub. ""Slough started as a data centre location by banking institutions for their own in-house data centres, looking for locations that were outside of London for emergency planning reasons, but close enough so that the miniscule time delay in transmission of data across the distance of cabling was sufficiently small to not be an issue to financial markets in terms of transaction delays on trading,"" the council says. ""Co-location is an advantage for data centres, so the existing cluster attracts further interest."" However, data centres are resource hungry and use a lot of electricity to keep the servers cool and the internet running. They also use a lot of water for cooling. In the 2022 drought, Thames Water looked at how much water data centres in the area were using. National Grid's chief executive, John Pettigrew, has previously said that the power data centres use would increase six-fold in the next decade. He said the grid was becoming ""constrained"" and ""bold action"" was needed to create a network able to cope with ""dramatically"" growing demand. According to the website datacenters.com, sustainable energy is a goal in Slough. ""The International Energy Agency reports that hyperscale data centres, which are prevalent in Slough, have accounted for a substantial increase in energy demand globally,"" it says. ""This has prompted data centre operators in Slough to invest in renewable energy sources, energy-efficient equipment, and advanced cooling technologies to reduce their carbon footprint."" On the site, Virgin O2 also monitors its phone mast network and its broadband. Emma Fish, the regional operations manager, says data centres are key in the world today and Slough provides the ideal base. ""I think people do realise now how important broadband is,"" she says. ""I think people class it as a fourth utility. When you buy a house, it's the first thing you look at really to see how fast the broadband is and how reliable it is and I think we depend on it more so now than we have ever done."" ""I think Slough is a key location. Just off the M4, just outside London, I just think Slough is the perfect location for data centres,"" she adds. Listen to the best of BBC Radio London on Sounds and follow BBC London on Facebook, X and Instagram. Send your story ideas to hello.bbclondon@bbc.co.uk ",BBC,21/05/2024,"['The town of Slough in Berkshire, just outside London, has had a terrible press over the years.', 'Many will put that down to the British sitcom The Office, yet even before that in 1937 the poet John Betjeman wrote ""Come friendly bombs and fall on Slough!"".', 'But that is perhaps changing.', 'With its direct transport links to London, close proximity to Heathrow Airport and fast fibre optic connections, it is said to be perfectly placed for a hi-tech revolution.', 'According to the Slough and South Bucks Observer, the town has ""Europe’s largest collection of data centres"", with 34 currently based there and more on the way.', 'Demand for data centres has been growing ever since the internet took off.', 'According to the local newspaper, Slough, which is just outside the M25 and is less than 10 miles away from Heathrow, welcomed its first data centre in 2005.', 'Slough Trading Estate is now considered to be the largest data centre hub in Europe.', ""For those who don't know, these data centres are where pretty much anything on your phone or computer is stored - the Cloud, websites, social media, pictures, music and more."", ""Many of London's banks and emergency services use Slough's data centres."", 'But this is a secretive and highly sensitive world where security is not unsurprisingly paramount.', 'Many data centres do not want media attention and politely declined our requests to go inside them.', 'Even the actual number of data centres in Slough is difficult to pin down.', 'Slough Borough Council says there is ""no definitive record source"" to identify the number of data centres in the borough but it is estimated to be about 30 to 35.', 'So when we were invited in by Virgin Media O2, it was a rare opportunity to see inside a data centre.', 'Tom Finch, a technical site engineer who works in the data centre, says the site is O2\'s largest mobile data centre in the UK and manages traffic for 3G, 4G and 5G customers. ""', 'You have voice calls, you have texts, you have all of your social media platforms like WhatsApp.', 'Everything you operate on your cellular data on your mobile phone will pass through this data centre,"" he says.', 'He says demand has increased since the rise in home working and thinks Slough benefits from very fast fibre optic connections. ""', 'Slough is on the data highway in the UK.', 'It\'s far enough outside the capital but through here we have a lot of traffic passing,"" he says.', 'Dan Goodenough, the technical site operations manager, says they have to predict when people want data and demand has gone up since the pandemic.', 'He says they see ""surges in traffic demand, but also the types of traffic"". ""', 'For example it\'s home working but it\'s also online gaming, virtual reality, there\'s different types of traffic that go across our network today than there was 10 years ago,"" he says. ""', 'The most recent Fortnite download for example, we saw massive peaks in the amount of data our customers were downloading.', 'And that\'s why we invest £10bn in infrastructure to make sure we can provide the best service.""', 'So why Slough?', 'According to the website datacenters.com, the advantages of Slough are its strategic location with excellent transport links to London.', 'The proximity of Heathrow is also an advantage.', 'It says the Slough data centre market offers a number of size facilities to allow expansion.', 'And Slough also has very robust and fast fibre optic broadband connectivity.', 'It is situated on the main fibre optic line between London and the US.', 'The borough council says being on the main cabling running out of London to Ireland and the US is an advantage.', 'It says it was the capital\'s banks that helped create this data centre hub. ""', 'Slough started as a data centre location by banking institutions for their own in-house data centres, looking for locations that were outside of London for emergency planning reasons, but close enough so that the miniscule time delay in transmission of data across the distance of cabling was sufficiently small to not be an issue to financial markets in terms of transaction delays on trading,"" the council says. ""', 'Co-location is an advantage for data centres, so the existing cluster attracts further interest.""', 'However, data centres are resource hungry and use a lot of electricity to keep the servers cool and the internet running.', 'They also use a lot of water for cooling.', 'In the 2022 drought, Thames Water looked at how much water data centres in the area were using.', ""National Grid's chief executive, John Pettigrew, has previously said that the power data centres use would increase six-fold in the next decade."", 'He said the grid was becoming ""constrained"" and ""bold action"" was needed to create a network able to cope with ""dramatically"" growing demand.', 'According to the website datacenters.com, sustainable energy is a goal in Slough. ""', 'The International Energy Agency reports that hyperscale data centres, which are prevalent in Slough, have accounted for a substantial increase in energy demand globally,"" it says. ""', 'This has prompted data centre operators in Slough to invest in renewable energy sources, energy-efficient equipment, and advanced cooling technologies to reduce their carbon footprint.""', 'On the site, Virgin O2 also monitors its phone mast network and its broadband.', 'Emma Fish, the regional operations manager, says data centres are key in the world today and Slough provides the ideal base. ""', 'I think people do realise now how important broadband is,"" she says. ""', 'I think people class it as a fourth utility.', 'When you buy a house, it\'s the first thing you look at really to see how fast the broadband is and how reliable it is and I think we depend on it more so now than we have ever done."" ""', 'I think Slough is a key location.', 'Just off the M4, just outside London, I just think Slough is the perfect location for data centres,"" she adds.', 'Listen to the best of BBC Radio London on Sounds and follow BBC London on Facebook, X and Instagram.', 'Send your story ideas to hello.bbclondon@bbc.co.uk']",0.1964139971947754,"This has prompted data centre operators in Slough to invest in renewable energy sources, energy-efficient equipment, and advanced cooling technologies to reduce their carbon footprint.""","Slough started as a data centre location by banking institutions for their own in-house data centres, looking for locations that were outside of London for emergency planning reasons, but close enough so that the miniscule time delay in transmission of data across the distance of cabling was sufficiently small to not be an issue to financial markets in terms of transaction delays on trading,"" the council says. """,0.7485351525247097,"He says demand has increased since the rise in home working and thinks Slough benefits from very fast fibre optic connections. ""","The town of Slough in Berkshire, just outside London, has had a terrible press over the years.",2024-05-21 "How Macy’s, Kohl’s and Nordstrom are chasing Millennial, Gen Z shoppers",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/20/macys-kohls-nordstrom-earnings-department-stores-younger-shoppers.html,2024-05-20T20:17:50+0000,"In this articleDepartment stores are aging — and so are their customers.For more than a century, the stores won over multiple generations with a promise to sell shoppers a wide variety of everything. For many millennial and Gen Z consumers, that hasn't been enough — especially as they discover items on social media and specialty retailers, big-box stores and online players steal away sales.Department stores like Macy's, Kohl's and Nordstrom face an existential crisis, as they try to persuade investors to bet on their futures while sales slow and their core customers age. Harsh scrutiny from Wall Street has contributed to a fresh attempt by Nordstrom to take the company private, and a bid by activist investors to take over Macy's and turn it into a private company. Kohl's, too, has been the target of activist investors in the past few years.Oliver Chen, a retail analyst at TD Cowen, said attracting younger customers has become more urgent, since the retailers have ""lost so much ground already.""""When you're a department store, you need to — and you should — be catering to younger and older,"" he said.Customer data illustrates the challenge for the retailers: At Kohl's, 40% of customers are baby boomers, according to Numerator, a market research firm that tracks retail trends and sales patterns with a panel of 150,000 U.S. consumers that's balanced to represent the population. At Macy's, more than a third of customers — 36% — are boomers. (Macy's data includes just its namesake stores and website, not Bloomingdale's and beauty chain Bluemercury.)Baby boomers are age 60 or older, according to Numerator's definition. The firm defines Gen X as between ages 43 and 59. Numerator puts millennials in the age 29 to 42 range, and Gen Z between 18 and 28, since it only collects data from consumers 18 or older.Nordstrom is the only one of the three that has a larger base of millennial and Gen X shoppers than baby boomers, with boomers accounting for 25% of its customer base. Its customer data includes both its namesake stores and its off-price retail chain, Nordstrom Rack, which has been known to draw in younger, fashion-forward customers hunting for deals.All three department stores have announced plans to woo new customers — including younger ones. Yet they have shared weak outlooks for the fiscal year, calling for little, if any, year-over-year sales growth.Chen said the retailers are paying more attention to the problem, since Macy's and Kohl's both have new CEOs and all three are trying to improve their private brands. The lines can help a retailer stand out because they are exclusive and often priced lower than national brands.Aging customers aren't department stores' only hurdle. The chains, like other retailers, have struggled with foot traffic and sales as consumers spend less on clothing, bedding and other discretionary items while more of their money goes toward everyday items because of inflation.To attract younger shoppers, Kohl's is adding trendier clothing for teens, opening more Sephora shops and bulking up its baby department.In an interview with CNBC in late March, CEO Tom Kingsbury said department stores, including Kohl's, have relied too much on coupons to get customers through their doors. That formula doesn't work for millennial and Gen Z shoppers, he said. They want compelling merchandise and clear pricing — things they're finding at off-price stores like T.J. Maxx instead.Led by Kingsbury, Kohl's is trying to capitalize on life stages that tend to spark purchases, such as decorating an apartment for the first time or having a baby. The retailer plans to add Babies R Us shops to about 200 of its stores in the fall. It is now carrying more home goods, such as lighting and wall art.Kohl's has also used Sephora shops, which it is expanding to all stores, to draw in younger shoppers and try to nudge them to other parts of the store.""When they come in for Sephora, we want to make sure we can give them product they want as well,"" Kingsbury said.Still, Kohl's doesn't expect to see immediate results from the moves. It said in March that it anticipates net sales to range from a 1% decrease to a 1% increase for the full year, and comparable sales to range from flat to 2% higher.With a new CEO at the top, Macy's wants to refresh its namesake brand and shutter stores that have dragged down the company's sales.It plans to close more than a quarter of its approximately 500 namesake stores by early 2027. At the same time, Macy's is trying to go where younger shoppers are, including suburban strip malls and beauty aisles.The company plans to open up to 30 of its smaller off-mall Macy's stores over the next two years. The locations are roughly one-fifth the size of its traditional mall stores and typically next to grocers, big-box stores and off-price retailers, which have steadier foot traffic.It's also opening more Bloomingdale's stores and more locations of Bluemercury, its beauty chain — and taking steps to woo younger customers in the process.Macy's CEO Tony Spring, who stepped into the role in February, previously led Bloomingdale's, which carries luxury brands but also has popular private labels like clothing brand Aqua. It's also known for unique customer experiences, such as limited-time events or collections that tap into pop culture moments like the ""Barbie"" movie.He's hinted more of that is coming to Macy's. The company has debuted new, exclusive clothing brands and given others a makeover. It's trying to make Macy's more of an attraction, including by having a play area in Toys R Us shops within the stores or cocktails inside of Bloomie's, its smaller, off-mall version of Bloomingdale's.Despite efforts to jolt sales, the company's forecast is muted: Macy's expects full-year net sales to range between $22.2 billion and $22.9 billion, down from $23.09 billion in the prior year. It expects comparable sales, which take out the impact of store openings and closures, to range from a decline of about 1.5% to a gain of 1.5% compared with the year-ago period on an owned-plus-licensed basis and including third-party marketplace sales.One of the dilemmas for Macy's? Gen Z and millennial shoppers aren't as loyal, TD Cowen's Chen said. They shop high and low, buying a luxury handbag one day and an outfit from Target, Costco or Zara another.""You can actually look better for cheaper now,"" he said.Compared with its department store rivals, Nordstrom has had more success with younger shoppers.Some of that boils down to what the Seattle-based retailer carries: Nordstrom has been quicker to sign deals with hot brands and direct-to-consumer names, such as Skims, Kim Kardashian's shapewear company; and Beis, the handbag and luggage brand started by actress Shay Mitchell. It launched Australian fashion brand Princess Polly in January and timed the debut of millennial-focused fashion brand Nasty Gal with an activation in Los Angeles coinciding with the Coachella music and arts festival.Another advantage for Nordstrom? Most of its stores are Nordstrom Rack locations, off-price stores that may have a friendlier price point for younger shoppers.Still, CEO Erik Nordstrom said on the company's March earnings call that the retailer wants to do better. He said it's starting to a see a turnaround with the younger customer, ""which is an area we have a multiyear plan to improve.""Nordstrom is trying to increase its fashion-forward merchandise in a new way, too. About a month ago, it rolled out a third-party marketplace that allows it to sell a wider variety of items without taking on the risk of owning the inventory. The marketplace approach follows the model that Amazon and more recently, Walmart, has used to bulk up its online offerings.With the marketplace, Nordstrom has said it will double or triple the number of items sold through its website and app. Macy's, too, has begun using a third-party marketplace to add more items and brands.Like Macy's and Kohl's, though, Nordstrom has a lackluster forecast: It expects full-year revenue, including retail sales and credit cards, will range from a 2% decline to a 1% gain compared with the previous fiscal year, which had an additional week.Marketplaces can help department stores, as they're under pressure to tightly manage inventory yet appeal to what different age groups want, said Christine Barton, a senior partner who researches consumer habits for the Boston Consulting Group.Cost pressures can cause a retailer to place safer bets and order the same kind of merchandise that they always carry.""You take away some of that newness,"" she said. ""You going back to more tried and true brands or products and so that becomes a bit of a self-reinforcing prophecy in terms of that younger consumer.""Breaking away from those old habits is something that department stores will need to do if they want to become a staple for younger generations — and stay relevant for decades more, she said.",CNBC,20/05/2024,"['In this articleDepartment stores are aging — and so are their customers.', 'For more than a century, the stores won over multiple generations with a promise to sell shoppers a wide variety of everything.', ""For many millennial and Gen Z consumers, that hasn't been enough — especially as they discover items on social media and specialty retailers, big-box stores and online players steal away sales."", ""Department stores like Macy's, Kohl's and Nordstrom face an existential crisis, as they try to persuade investors to bet on their futures while sales slow and their core customers age."", ""Harsh scrutiny from Wall Street has contributed to a fresh attempt by Nordstrom to take the company private, and a bid by activist investors to take over Macy's and turn it into a private company."", ""Kohl's, too, has been the target of activist investors in the past few years."", 'Oliver Chen, a retail analyst at TD Cowen, said attracting younger customers has become more urgent, since the retailers have ""lost so much ground already.', '""""When you\'re a department store, you need to — and you should — be catering to younger and older,"" he said.', ""Customer data illustrates the challenge for the retailers: At Kohl's, 40% of customers are baby boomers, according to Numerator, a market research firm that tracks retail trends and sales patterns with a panel of 150,000 U.S. consumers that's balanced to represent the population."", ""At Macy's, more than a third of customers — 36% — are boomers. ("", ""Macy's data includes just its namesake stores and website, not Bloomingdale's and beauty chain Bluemercury.)Baby boomers are age 60 or older, according to Numerator's definition."", 'The firm defines Gen X as between ages 43 and 59.', 'Numerator puts millennials in the age 29 to 42 range, and Gen Z between 18 and 28, since it only collects data from consumers 18 or older.', 'Nordstrom is the only one of the three that has a larger base of millennial and Gen X shoppers than baby boomers, with boomers accounting for 25% of its customer base.', 'Its customer data includes both its namesake stores and its off-price retail chain, Nordstrom Rack, which has been known to draw in younger, fashion-forward customers hunting for deals.', 'All three department stores have announced plans to woo new customers — including younger ones.', 'Yet they have shared weak outlooks for the fiscal year, calling for little, if any, year-over-year sales growth.', ""Chen said the retailers are paying more attention to the problem, since Macy's and Kohl's both have new CEOs and all three are trying to improve their private brands."", 'The lines can help a retailer stand out because they are exclusive and often priced lower than national brands.', ""Aging customers aren't department stores' only hurdle."", 'The chains, like other retailers, have struggled with foot traffic and sales as consumers spend less on clothing, bedding and other discretionary items while more of their money goes toward everyday items because of inflation.', ""To attract younger shoppers, Kohl's is adding trendier clothing for teens, opening more Sephora shops and bulking up its baby department."", ""In an interview with CNBC in late March, CEO Tom Kingsbury said department stores, including Kohl's, have relied too much on coupons to get customers through their doors."", ""That formula doesn't work for millennial and Gen Z shoppers, he said."", ""They want compelling merchandise and clear pricing — things they're finding at off-price stores like T.J. Maxx instead."", ""Led by Kingsbury, Kohl's is trying to capitalize on life stages that tend to spark purchases, such as decorating an apartment for the first time or having a baby."", 'The retailer plans to add Babies R Us shops to about 200 of its stores in the fall.', 'It is now carrying more home goods, such as lighting and wall art.', ""Kohl's has also used Sephora shops, which it is expanding to all stores, to draw in younger shoppers and try to nudge them to other parts of the store."", '""When they come in for Sephora, we want to make sure we can give them product they want as well,"" Kingsbury said.', ""Still, Kohl's doesn't expect to see immediate results from the moves."", 'It said in March that it anticipates net sales to range from a 1% decrease to a 1% increase for the full year, and comparable sales to range from flat to 2% higher.', ""With a new CEO at the top, Macy's wants to refresh its namesake brand and shutter stores that have dragged down the company's sales."", 'It plans to closemore than a quarterof its approximately 500 namesake stores by early 2027.', ""At the same time, Macy's is trying to go where younger shoppers are, including suburban strip malls and beauty aisles."", ""The company plans to open up to 30 of its smaller off-mall Macy's storesover the next two years."", 'The locations are roughly one-fifth the size of its traditional mall stores and typically next to grocers, big-box stores and off-price retailers, which have steadier foot traffic.', ""It's also opening more Bloomingdale's stores and more locations of Bluemercury, its beauty chain — and taking steps to woo younger customers in the process."", ""Macy's CEO Tony Spring, who stepped into the role in February, previously led Bloomingdale's, which carries luxury brands but also has popular private labels like clothing brand Aqua."", 'It\'s also known for unique customer experiences, such as limited-time events or collections that tap into pop culture moments like the ""Barbie"" movie.', ""He's hinted more of that is coming to Macy's."", 'The company has debuted new, exclusive clothing brands and given others a makeover.', ""It's trying to make Macy's more of an attraction, including by having a play area in Toys R Us shops within the stores or cocktails inside of Bloomie's, its smaller, off-mall version of Bloomingdale's."", ""Despite efforts to jolt sales, the company's forecast is muted: Macy's expects full-year net sales to range between $22.2 billion and $22.9 billion, down from $23.09 billion in the prior year."", 'It expects comparable sales, which take out the impact of store openings and closures, to range from a decline of about 1.5% to a gain of 1.5% compared with the year-ago period on an owned-plus-licensed basis and including third-party marketplace sales.', ""One of the dilemmas for Macy's?"", ""Gen Z and millennial shoppers aren't as loyal, TD Cowen's Chen said."", 'They shop high and low, buying a luxury handbag one day and an outfit from Target, Costco or Zara another.', '""You can actually look better for cheaper now,"" he said.', 'Compared with its department store rivals, Nordstrom has had more success with younger shoppers.', ""Some of that boils down to what the Seattle-based retailer carries: Nordstrom has been quicker to sign deals with hot brands and direct-to-consumer names, such as Skims, Kim Kardashian's shapewear company; and Beis, the handbag and luggage brand started by actress Shay Mitchell."", 'It launched Australian fashion brand Princess Polly in January and timed the debut of millennial-focused fashion brand Nasty Gal with an activation in Los Angeles coinciding with the Coachella music and arts festival.', 'Another advantage for Nordstrom?', 'Most of its stores are Nordstrom Rack locations, off-price stores that may have a friendlier price point for younger shoppers.', ""Still, CEO Erik Nordstrom said on the company's March earnings call that the retailer wants to do better."", 'He said it\'s starting to a see a turnaround with the younger customer, ""which is an area we have a multiyear plan to improve.', '""Nordstrom is trying to increase its fashion-forward merchandise in a new way, too.', 'About a month ago, it rolled out a third-party marketplace that allows it to sell a wider variety of items without taking on the risk of owning the inventory.', 'The marketplace approach follows the model that Amazon and more recently, Walmart, has used to bulk up its online offerings.', 'With the marketplace, Nordstrom has said it will double or triple the number of items sold through its website and app.', ""Macy's, too, has begun using a third-party marketplace to add more items and brands."", ""Like Macy's and Kohl's, though, Nordstrom has a lackluster forecast: It expects full-year revenue, including retail sales and credit cards, will range from a 2% decline to a 1% gain compared with the previous fiscal year, which had an additional week."", ""Marketplaces can help department stores, as they're under pressure to tightly manage inventory yet appeal to what different age groups want, said Christine Barton, a senior partner who researches consumer habits for the Boston Consulting Group."", 'Cost pressures can cause a retailer to place safer bets and order the same kind of merchandise that they always carry.', '""You take away some of that newness,"" she said. ""', 'You going back to more tried and true brands or products and so that becomes a bit of a self-reinforcing prophecy in terms of that younger consumer.', '""Breaking away from those old habits is something that department stores will need to do if they want to become a staple for younger generations — and stay relevant for decades more, she said.']",0.2190840118688906,"Like Macy's and Kohl's, though, Nordstrom has a lackluster forecast: It expects full-year revenue, including retail sales and credit cards, will range from a 2% decline to a 1% gain compared with the previous fiscal year, which had an additional week.","For many millennial and Gen Z consumers, that hasn't been enough — especially as they discover items on social media and specialty retailers, big-box stores and online players steal away sales.",0.0798774834336905,"He said it's starting to a see a turnaround with the younger customer, ""which is an area we have a multiyear plan to improve.","Like Macy's and Kohl's, though, Nordstrom has a lackluster forecast: It expects full-year revenue, including retail sales and credit cards, will range from a 2% decline to a 1% gain compared with the previous fiscal year, which had an additional week.",2024-05-21 Roche says weight loss drug shows promising results in early trial,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/roche-weight-loss-drug-shows-promising-results-in-early-trial.html,2024-05-16T14:03:34+0000,"In this articleRoche on Thursday said its experimental weight loss drug showed promising results in an early-stage trial, boosting the company's bid to compete in the booming market for those treatments.The Swiss company joined a slate of drugmakers racing to develop obesity drugs through its almost $3 billion acquisition of Carmot Therapeutics in December. But its weekly weight loss injection, called CT-388, is still years away from entering the market.The weight loss drug space is dominated by treatments from Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly, and some analysts say the market will be worth $100 billion by the end of the decade.Roche's CT-388 helped patients with obesity lose 18.8% of their weight relative to those who received a placebo, after 24 weeks in the phase one trial, the company said.Roche added that all of the patients who received the drug lost more than 5% of their weight. Meanwhile, 70% of those people lost more than 15% of their weight, and 45% lost more than 20%.The treatment works by mimicking the effect of two gut hormones — GLP-1 and GIP — to suppress a person's appetite, just like Eli Lilly's popular weight loss drug Zepbound and diabetes injection Mounjaro.Scientists have hypothesized that targeting those two hormones could have a meaningful effect on weight loss and blood sugar levels with fewer side effects than drugs that only target GLP-1, such as Novo Nordisk's weight loss treatment Wegovy.Roche's CT-388 is being developed to treat both obesity and diabetes.Roche said it did not observe any new or unexpected side effects in patients taking CT-388. The company noted that mild to moderate gastrointestinal side effects were the most common, consistent with other weight loss and diabetes drugs that work the same way.CT-388 also normalized blood sugar levels in a subgroup of patients with pre-diabetes.Roche said it is testing CT-388 in an additional group of patients with obesity and diabetes over 12 weeks. The company expects data from those patients in the second half of the year.Eli Lilly's Zepbound delivered up to 22% weight loss after 72 weeks, while Novo Nordisk's Wegovy has led to 15% weight loss after 68 weeks.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"[""In this articleRoche on Thursday saidits experimental weight loss drug showed promising results in an early-stage trial, boosting the company's bid to compete in the booming market for those treatments."", 'The Swiss company joined a slate of drugmakers racing to develop obesity drugs through its almost $3 billion acquisition of Carmot Therapeutics in December.', 'But its weekly weight loss injection, called CT-388, is still years away from entering the market.', 'The weight loss drug space is dominated by treatments from Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly, and some analysts say the market will be worth $100 billion by the end of the decade.', ""Roche's CT-388 helped patients with obesity lose 18.8% of their weight relative to those who received a placebo, after 24 weeksin the phase one trial, the company said."", 'Roche added that all of the patients who received the drug lost more than 5% of their weight.', ""Meanwhile, 70% of those people lost more than 15% of their weight, and 45% lost more than 20%.The treatment works by mimicking the effect of two gut hormones — GLP-1 and GIP — to suppress a person's appetite, just like Eli Lilly's popular weight loss drug Zepbound and diabetes injection Mounjaro."", ""Scientists have hypothesized that targeting those two hormones could have a meaningful effect on weight loss and blood sugar levels with fewer side effects than drugs that only target GLP-1, such as Novo Nordisk's weight loss treatment Wegovy."", ""Roche's CT-388 is being developed to treat both obesity and diabetes."", 'Roche said it did not observe any new or unexpected side effects in patients taking CT-388.', 'The company noted that mild to moderate gastrointestinal side effects were the most common, consistent with other weight loss and diabetes drugs that work the same way.', 'CT-388 also normalized blood sugar levels in a subgroup of patients with pre-diabetes.', 'Roche said it is testing CT-388 in an additional group of patients with obesity and diabetes over 12 weeks.', 'The company expects data from those patients in the second half of the year.', ""Eli Lilly's Zepbound delivered up to 22% weight loss after 72 weeks, while Novo Nordisk's Wegovy has led to 15% weight loss after 68 weeks.""]",-0.1197380032998948,"In this articleRoche on Thursday saidits experimental weight loss drug showed promising results in an early-stage trial, boosting the company's bid to compete in the booming market for those treatments.","Eli Lilly's Zepbound delivered up to 22% weight loss after 72 weeks, while Novo Nordisk's Wegovy has led to 15% weight loss after 68 weeks.",0.9663981000582376,"In this articleRoche on Thursday saidits experimental weight loss drug showed promising results in an early-stage trial, boosting the company's bid to compete in the booming market for those treatments.",,2024-05-21 Biden's EV tariffs may not be enough to stave off the threat of Chinese vehicles in the U.S.,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/15/china-biden-ev-tariffs-may-not-be-enough-to-stave-off-growing-threat.html,2024-05-15T19:46:13+0000,"DETROIT — President Joe Biden's plan to quadruple tariffs on China-made electric vehicles is unlikely to stave off the threat of more Chinese cars on the auto sales market in the U.S.The 100% tariff announced Tuesday, up from a current import tax of about 25%, covers EVs imported from China but could still leave room for the often-cheap Chinese models to undercut domestic prices and leaves loopholes for imports made by Chinese automakers in other countries, like neighboring Mexico. It also does nothing to address current or future gas-powered vehicles imported from the Communist country to the U.S.Automotive and trade experts say the increased tariffs are a near-term protectionism act that may delay but won't stop Chinese automakers from coming to the U.S. with EVs.""They're going to be here. It's inevitable. It's just a matter of time,"" said Dan Hearsch, Americas co-leader of automotive and industrial practice at consulting firm AlixPartners. ""Western automakers, Western suppliers really ought to be upping their game and preparing to take this on or play with them. It's one or the other.""The EV tariffs, including other increases regarding battery materials, were among new tariff rates on $18 billion worth of Chinese imports.For decades, Chinese auto companies have said they will begin selling vehicles in the U.S. under their own brands, but none have succeeded.The quality of Chinese automakers' vehicles has gotten significantly better in recent years, as Beijing has helped by subsidizing their operations to grow domestic production. The increase in domestic automakers has led to a rapid deterioration of market share in the country for global automakers such as General Motors.Global players have made more inroads in the U.S. market in recent years. The so-called Big Three U.S. automakers — GM, Ford Motor and Chrysler, now owned by Stellantis — have watched their market share in the country deteriorate from 75% in 1984 to about 40% in 2023, according to industry data.GM and others have found it hard to compete against budget and mainstream Chinese vehicles, including EVs. For example, a small EV from Warren Buffett-backed BYD called the Seagull starts at around $10,000 and reportedly banks a profit for the increasingly influential Chinese automaker.Though the Seagull isn't yet sold on U.S. soil, BYD is expanding its vehicles globally, and some believe it's only a matter of time before more China-made vehicles arrive in the U.S.Even with the new 100% tariff, its pricing would likely be in line with or better than many EVs currently on sale in the U.S.""Ultimately, we think protectionism from the West could remain a near-term overhang for Chinese EV/parts makers aiming for rapid global expansion, but we think it is unlikely to halt China's EV push in the long run,"" Morgan Stanley analyst Tim Hsiao said in an investor note this week.Though some automakers currently import gas-powered vehicles from China into the U.S., the numbers are small. Wall Street analysts, citing the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, report fewer than 75,000 vehicles were imported into the U.S. last year.Vehicles made in China and currently sold in the U.S. include GM's gas-powered Buick Envision, Ford's Lincoln Nautilus and two all-electric vehicles from Geely-owned Volvo and its spinoff EV startup Polestar.Polestar, with a small lineup of vehicles, is notably reliant on its Chinese imports. The company, in a statement, said it is ""currently evaluating the announcement of tariff increases from the Biden Administration,"" saying it believes ""free trade is essential to speed up the transition to more sustainable mobility through increased EV adoption.""Biden's focus on China-made EVs — and the exclusion of gas-powered vehicles in the higher levies — fits with the White House's clean energy agenda, which has emphasized electric vehicle production and adoption as well as enhanced U.S. charging infrastructure.""EVs are where we're focused in terms of placing tariffs, because that's where we've made hundreds of billions of dollars of public investments. We've made those investments to build resilience in our clean technology supply chains. And so that's our focus here,"" a senior administration official told reporters this week.It's possible U.S. officials are taking a warning sign from Europe, where Chinese automakers have quickly flooded markets with gas-saving EVs and undercut domestic automakers.Chinese companies accounted for 8% of Europe's all-electric vehicle sales as of September and could increase their share to 15% by 2025, the European Union said in October 2023. The EU believes Chinese EVs are undercutting the prices of local models by about 20%.The Biden administration's new EV tariffs could have a ripple effect on other countries, including in Europe, if they're successful in stemming Chinese exports, according to Coco Zhang, vice president of ESG research at ING Group.She said similar tariffs elsewhere could force Chinese companies to move more quickly to establish local production operations or joint ventures with other companies in an attempt to lower export costs.""From China's perspective, if there can be supply or other sorts of partnerships, they can still find their way going into the U.S. market,"" Zhang said.Such moves would be reminiscent of how Japanese automakers such as Toyota Motor and Nissan Motor as well as South Korea's Hyundai Motor, including Kia Motors, entered the U.S. market in recent decades.– CNBC's Rebecca Picciotto and Michael Bloom contributed to this report.",CNBC,15/05/2024,"[""DETROIT — President Joe Biden's plan to quadruple tariffs on China-made electric vehicles is unlikely to stave off the threat of more Chinese cars on the auto sales market in the U.S.The 100% tariff announced Tuesday, up from a current import tax of about 25%, covers EVs imported from China but could still leave room for the often-cheap Chinese models to undercut domestic prices and leaves loopholes for imports made by Chinese automakers in other countries, like neighboring Mexico."", ""It also does nothing to address current or future gas-powered vehicles imported from the Communist country to the U.S.Automotive and trade experts say the increased tariffs are a near-term protectionism act that may delay but won't stop Chinese automakers from coming to the U.S. with EVs."", '""They\'re going to be here.', ""It's inevitable."", 'It\'s just a matter of time,"" said Dan Hearsch, Americas co-leader of automotive and industrial practice at consulting firm AlixPartners. ""', 'Western automakers, Western suppliers really ought to be upping their game and preparing to take this on or play with them.', ""It's one or the other."", '""The EV tariffs, including other increases regarding battery materials, were among new tariff rates on $18 billion worth of Chinese imports.', 'For decades, Chinese auto companies have said they will begin selling vehicles in the U.S. under their own brands, but none have succeeded.', ""The quality of Chinese automakers' vehicles has gotten significantly better in recent years, as Beijing has helped by subsidizing their operations to grow domestic production."", 'The increase in domestic automakers has led to a rapid deterioration of market share in the country for global automakers such as General Motors.', 'Global players have made more inroads in the U.S. market in recent years.', 'The so-called Big Three U.S. automakers — GM, FordMotor and Chrysler, now owned byStellantis— have watched their market share in the country deteriorate from 75% in 1984 to about 40% in 2023, according to industry data.', 'GM and others have found it hard to compete against budget and mainstream Chinese vehicles, including EVs.', 'For example, a small EV from Warren Buffett-backed BYD called the Seagull starts at around $10,000 and reportedly banks a profit for the increasingly influential Chinese automaker.', 'Though the Seagull isn\'t yet sold on U.S. soil, BYD is expanding its vehicles globally, and some believe it\'s only a matter of time before more China-made vehicles arrive in the U.S.Even with the new 100% tariff, its pricing would likely be in line with or better than many EVs currently on sale in the U.S.""Ultimately, we think protectionism from the West could remain a near-term overhang for Chinese EV/parts makers aiming for rapid global expansion, but we think it is unlikely to halt China\'s EV push in the long run,"" Morgan Stanley analyst Tim Hsiao said in an investor note this week.', 'Though some automakers currently import gas-powered vehicles from China into the U.S., the numbers are small.', 'Wall Street analysts, citing the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, report fewer than 75,000 vehicles were imported into the U.S. last year.', ""Vehicles made in China and currently sold in the U.S. include GM's gas-powered Buick Envision, Ford's Lincoln Nautilus and two all-electric vehicles from Geely-owned Volvo and its spinoff EV startup Polestar."", 'Polestar, with a small lineup of vehicles, is notably reliant on its Chinese imports.', 'The company, in a statement, said it is ""currently evaluating the announcement of tariff increases from the Biden Administration,"" saying it believes ""free trade is essential to speed up the transition to more sustainable mobility through increased EV adoption.', '""Biden\'s focus on China-made EVs — and the exclusion of gas-powered vehicles in the higher levies — fits with the White House\'s clean energy agenda, which has emphasized electric vehicle production and adoption as well as enhanced U.S. charging infrastructure.', '""EVs are where we\'re focused in terms of placing tariffs, because that\'s where we\'ve made hundreds of billions of dollars of public investments.', ""We've made those investments to build resilience in our clean technology supply chains."", 'And so that\'s our focus here,"" a senior administration official told reporters this week.', ""It's possible U.S. officials are taking a warning sign from Europe, where Chinese automakers have quickly flooded markets with gas-saving EVs and undercut domestic automakers."", ""Chinese companies accounted for 8% of Europe's all-electric vehicle sales as of September and could increase their share to 15% by 2025, the European Union said in October 2023."", ""The EU believes Chinese EVs are undercutting the prices of local models by about 20%.The Biden administration's new EV tariffs could have a ripple effect on other countries, including in Europe, if they're successful in stemming Chinese exports, according to Coco Zhang, vice president of ESG research at ING Group."", 'She said similar tariffs elsewhere could force Chinese companies to move more quickly to establish local production operations or joint ventures with other companies in an attempt to lower export costs.', '""From China\'s perspective, if there can be supply or other sorts of partnerships, they can still find their way going into the U.S. market,"" Zhang said.', ""Such moves would be reminiscent of how Japanese automakers such as Toyota Motor and Nissan Motor as well as South Korea's Hyundai Motor, including Kia Motors, entered the U.S. market in recent decades.–"", ""CNBC's Rebecca Picciotto and Michael Bloom contributed to this report.""]",0.1305594935970119,"For example, a small EV from Warren Buffett-backed BYD called the Seagull starts at around $10,000 and reportedly banks a profit for the increasingly influential Chinese automaker.","Such moves would be reminiscent of how Japanese automakers such as Toyota Motor and Nissan Motor as well as South Korea's Hyundai Motor, including Kia Motors, entered the U.S. market in recent decades.–",0.0812817851702372,"The quality of Chinese automakers' vehicles has gotten significantly better in recent years, as Beijing has helped by subsidizing their operations to grow domestic production.",The increase in domestic automakers has led to a rapid deterioration of market share in the country for global automakers such as General Motors.,2024-05-21 Short seller alleges Oddity Tech is misleading investors,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/21/oddity-tech-short-seller-allegations.html,2024-05-21T19:59:55+0000,"In this articleA short seller on Tuesday alleged that beauty and wellness company Oddity Tech has been misleading investors and isn't the online-only retailer it's claimed to be. The firm, Ningi Research, published a 50-page report that details a slew of allegations against the newly public retailer, including that it runs a fleet of stores in Israel and engages in deceptive billing practices. Ningi has a short position in Oddity but didn't disclose the size of that position.  ""ODDITY fundamentally rejects the short seller report. The allegations contained in the report by NINGI Research are based on demonstratable factual inaccuracies, incorrect assumptions, and unfounded and malicious speculation,"" a company spokesperson wrote in an email to CNBC.Shares of Oddity fell roughly 9% Tuesday.Oddity Tech, the parent company of makeup brand Il Makiage and skincare brand Spoiled Child, sold investors on the premise that it's disrupting the legacy beauty industry by changing the way people buy makeup online. It bills itself as a purely digital retailer that sells directly to consumers and has said it's seen outsized profits and growth that similar businesses have found difficult to achieve. Ningi Research alleged that Oddity is not a purely digital company and that its Il Makiage brand has more than 40 stores in Israel, where the company is based. Ningi further claims that the majority of Oddity's profits are coming from the region – not the U.S.Ningi Research also said that it has visited the Il Makiage stores in Israel and purchased two of the company's best-selling products from different locations. The firm said the stores are not part of a franchise but are instead owned by the company. Oddity said in a statement the Israeli brick-and-mortar business, totaling 43 retail stores and six beauty schools, represents an ""immaterial"" part of the business — amounting to less than 5% of the company's net revenue, according to the spokesperson.""All of ODDITY's revenue outside of Israel is exclusively from online sales,"" the spokesperson said.The short seller also alleged that the ""secret"" to Oddity's digital growth is in subscriptions, which Ningi claimed can be difficult for consumers to get out of or cancel. ""The sell-side touts ODDITY's 'impressively high' repeat purchase rates of 100 percent, but we don't buy that. Our research indicates that customers unknowingly enter into non-cancelable plans, allowing ODDITY to recognize repeat purchases in the following quarters even though the customers don't want the product,"" the report said. The report also detailed a host of complaints from the Better Business Bureau and social media from customers who say they've been wrongfully charged.Oddity, though the spokesperson, said in a statement that the company ""firmly stands behind"" both its use of technology and its customer experience.""ODDITY will always continue to address incidents of dissatisfaction and keep its customers satisfied and loyal,"" the spokesperson said in a statement.In October, an analyst asked the company about customer complaints and if the issue was happening ""at scale."" In response, CEO Oran Holtzman said it's ""important to understand the magnitude of the claim and we're talking about a fraction of a percent."" ""Any online company that operates even close to our sales will experience this, like there will always be a certain percentage who are unhappy,"" said Holtzman. He said that for a ""small portion"" of its customers, it can be easy to get confused about pre-authorizations made to their cards related to Oddity's ""Try before you buy"" option, which allows a customer to try out a makeup item. ""Now, I don't think that it makes sense to cancel this massive customer benefit because a super small fraction of users who didn't fully read up like how it works and were confused,"" said Holtzman. ""We'll continue to work hard to educate those users and we've invested a lot in technology around it."" Oddity previously told CNBC that more than half of its business is from repeat customers.",CNBC,21/05/2024,"[""In this articleA short seller on Tuesday alleged that beauty and wellness company Oddity Tech has been misleading investors and isn't the online-only retailer it's claimed to be."", 'The firm, Ningi Research, published a 50-page report that details a slew of allegations against the newly public retailer, including that it runs a fleet of stores in Israel and engages in deceptive billing practices.', ""Ningi has a short position in Oddity but didn't disclose the size of that position."", '""ODDITY fundamentally rejects the short seller report.', 'The allegations contained in the report by NINGI Research are based on demonstratable factual inaccuracies, incorrect assumptions, and unfounded and malicious speculation,"" a company spokesperson wrote in an email to CNBC.Shares of Oddity fell roughly 9% Tuesday.', ""Oddity Tech, the parent company of makeup brand Il Makiage and skincare brand Spoiled Child, sold investors on the premise that it's disrupting the legacy beauty industry by changing the way people buy makeup online."", ""It bills itself as a purely digital retailer that sells directly to consumers and has said it's seen outsized profits and growth that similar businesses have found difficult to achieve."", 'Ningi Research alleged that Oddity is not a purely digital company and that its Il Makiage brand has more than 40 stores in Israel, where the company is based.', ""Ningi further claims that the majority of Oddity's profits are coming from the region – not the U.S.Ningi Research also said that it has visited the Il Makiage stores in Israel and purchased two of the company's best-selling products from different locations."", 'The firm said the stores are not part of a franchise but are instead owned by the company.', 'Oddity said in a statement the Israeli brick-and-mortar business, totaling 43 retail stores and six beauty schools, represents an ""immaterial"" part of the business — amounting to less than 5% of the company\'s net revenue, according to the spokesperson.', '""All of ODDITY\'s revenue outside of Israel is exclusively from online sales,"" the spokesperson said.', 'The short seller also alleged that the ""secret"" to Oddity\'s digital growth is in subscriptions, which Ningi claimed can be difficult for consumers to get out of or cancel.', '""The sell-side touts ODDITY\'s \'impressively high\' repeat purchase rates of 100 percent, but we don\'t buy that.', 'Our research indicates that customers unknowingly enter into non-cancelable plans, allowing ODDITY to recognize repeat purchases in the following quarters even though the customers don\'t want the product,"" the report said.', ""The report also detailed a host of complaints from the Better Business Bureau and social media from customers who say they've been wrongfully charged."", 'Oddity, though the spokesperson, said in a statement that the company ""firmly stands behind"" both its use of technology and its customer experience.', '""ODDITY will always continue to address incidents of dissatisfaction and keep its customers satisfied and loyal,"" the spokesperson said in a statement.', 'In October, an analyst asked the company about customer complaints and if the issue was happening ""at scale.""', 'In response, CEO Oran Holtzman said it\'s ""important to understand the magnitude of the claim and we\'re talking about a fraction of a percent.', '""""Any online company that operates even close to our sales will experience this, like there will always be a certain percentage who are unhappy,"" said Holtzman.', 'He said that for a ""small portion"" of its customers, it can be easy to get confused about pre-authorizations made to their cards related to Oddity\'s ""Try before you buy"" option, which allows a customer to try out a makeup item.', '""Now, I don\'t think that it makes sense to cancel this massive customer benefit because a super small fraction of users who didn\'t fully read up like how it works and were confused,"" said Holtzman. ""', ""We'll continue to work hard to educate those users and we've invested a lot in technology around it."", '""Oddity previously told CNBC that more than half of its business is from repeat customers.']",0.1573720586307279,Ningi further claims that the majority of Oddity's profits are coming from the region – not the U.S.Ningi Research also said that it has visited the Il Makiage stores in Israel and purchased two of the company's best-selling products from different locations.,"""ODDITY fundamentally rejects the short seller report.",-0.0571975708007812,"""ODDITY will always continue to address incidents of dissatisfaction and keep its customers satisfied and loyal,"" the spokesperson said in a statement.","""Now, I don't think that it makes sense to cancel this massive customer benefit because a super small fraction of users who didn't fully read up like how it works and were confused,"" said Holtzman. """,2024-05-21 Why lab-grown diamond sales are surging,https://edition.cnn.com/2022/04/27/business/diamonds-manmade-demand/index.html," Published 7:49 AM EDT, Wed April 27, 2022 ","It’s proposal season, and engagements are on the rise. So are factory-made diamond sales. Not that you’d know the difference. Man-made diamonds look the same as naturally occurring ones. The only noticeable difference is the price tag. “The result is really stunning,” said Edahn Golan, an independent diamond industry analyst. He said March data showed the number of engagement rings sold that featured a manufactured diamond jumped 63% compared to last year, while the number of engagement rings sold with a natural diamond declined 25% in the same period. Going back by another month, to February, the data showed the number of rings sold with lab diamonds that month surged even more, to 80% compared to a year earlier while the number fell by 13% for natural diamond engagement rings. “The big fear in the natural diamonds industry is that consumers will start accepting lab-grown diamonds in engagement rings,” he said. Too late. “It’s actually happening.” Why are consumers flocking to man-made diamonds? Cost is the most obvious reason. The average retail price of the most popular one carat round man-made diamond for an engagement ring in March was $2,318, Golan said. “This is substantially less – as much as 73% cheaper – than a natural diamond of the same size, cut and clarity as the man-made diamond, which would cost $8,740,” he said. Plus, the lower cost allows couples to buy a bigger stone. “A lab diamond is a real diamond, but maybe it took a few weeks to make it,” said Golan. “Natural diamonds were formed over 800 million to three billion years and there isn’t an infinite supply of them.” This makes natural diamonds quite a bit more expensive, and prices are likely to rise as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has tightened the supply chain for natural raw diamonds. The sanctions directly target Alrosa, partly owned by the Russian government, which the US government identified as the world’s largest diamond mining company, accounting for 28% of global diamond output. Man-made diamonds are also becoming popular as consumers are more aware and educated about them, said Dan Moran, a third-generation diamond expert and owner of LA-based fine jeweler Concierge Diamonds. Moran said the typical buyer of man-made diamonds is typically younger than 40 and very budget conscious. Mined diamonds have a controversial history that’s tied to the use of child labor in some African diamond mines as well as sales of illegally-traded “conflict diamonds” that fund conflict in war-torn areas. Among Millennials and Gen Z, their eco-conscious mindset and ethical concerns about natural diamond sourcing is another factor influencing their preference for non-traditional engagement rings, according to a report from wedding planning website The Knot. Although its slice is growing, the market share for man-made diamonds remains relatively small. Currently, about 7% of the specialty diamond jewelry market is represented by man-made diamonds, up from 3% in 2020, said Golan. Some major jewelry retailers are driving the effort to take man-made diamonds mainstream. In 2021, the world’s largest jewelry company, Pandora (PANDY), made a major shift by announcing it would stop using mined diamonds and would swap to lab-created diamonds in its jewelry. Pandora said it’s instituting the change as part of an effort to sell sustainable jewelry, and also because consumers increasingly are asking for it. Signet, (SIG) the largest jewelry company in the United States (which owns Zales, Kay Jewelers and Jared chains) called out the popularity of lab diamond jewelry in its March earnings call with analysts. Calling it a “fast-growing category” in its jewelry portfolio, Signet CEO Virginia Drosos told analysts that lab-created diamonds are among the big jewelry trends she expects this year. The company said it has expanded its man-made bridal jewelry selection in both its Zales and Kay Jewelers stores in response to the increased demand. Fine jewelry brand Charles and Colvard, which makes lab-created diamonds, said consumers don’t just want to look good with the jewelry they are wearing, they also want to feel good about it. “As the momentum for conscious consumerism grows, the surge towards lab grown diamonds isn’t surprising,” said Don O’Connell, president and CEO of Charles & Colvard. “[Consumers] want to know the origins of their stones and be reassured they’re conflict-free. They’re embracing the choice to purchase a piece of fine jewelry that aligns with their values.” Lab-grown diamond brand VRAI said the pandemic, too, has sparked attention and action toward social and environmental issues. It said consumers are being more thoughtful and reassessing their purchasing habits, as well as the companies and industries they are supporting. There is, however, one important consideration for anyone buying lab-created diamonds: Man-made diamonds have little resale value. So while you may not be able to tell a natural diamond from a factory made variety, someone with a trained eye can, said Golan. Once a stone is identified as a factory diamond, even though you paid a lot less for it, you also won’t get much for it. But the value of a ring isn’t just monetary. “As a professional in the industry, I am asked all the time by people about what I think about a ring they have,” said Moran, of Concierge Jewelers. “I always say, if you love it, be happy with it. An engagement ring is a symbol of commitment and enduring love.”",CNN,27/04/2022,"['It’s proposal season, and engagements are on the rise.', 'So are factory-made diamond sales.', 'Not that you’d know the difference.', 'Man-made diamonds look the same as naturally occurring ones.', 'The only noticeable difference is the price tag.', '“The result is really stunning,” said Edahn Golan, an independent diamond industry analyst.', 'He said March data showed the number of engagement rings sold that featured a manufactured diamond jumped 63% compared to last year, while the number of engagement rings sold with a natural diamond declined 25% in the same period.', 'Going back by another month, to February, the data showed the number of rings sold with lab diamonds that month surged even more, to 80% compared to a year earlier while the number fell by 13% for natural diamond engagement rings.', '“The big fear in the natural diamonds industry is that consumers will start accepting lab-grown diamonds in engagement rings,” he said.', 'Too late. “', 'It’s actually happening.”', 'Why are consumers flocking to man-made diamonds?', 'Cost is the most obvious reason.', 'The average retail price of the most popular one carat round man-made diamond for an engagement ring in March was $2,318, Golan said.', '“This is substantially less – as much as 73% cheaper – than a natural diamond of the same size, cut and clarity as the man-made diamond, which would cost $8,740,” he said.', 'Plus, the lower cost allows couples to buy a bigger stone.', '“A lab diamond is a real diamond, but maybe it took a few weeks to make it,” said Golan. “', 'Natural diamonds were formed over 800 million to three billion years and there isn’t an infinite supply of them.”', 'This makes natural diamonds quite a bit more expensive, and prices are likely to rise as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has tightened the supply chain for natural raw diamonds.', 'The sanctions directly target Alrosa, partly owned by the Russian government, which the US government identified as the world’s largest diamond mining company, accounting for 28% of global diamond output.', 'Man-made diamonds are also becoming popular as consumers are more aware and educated about them, said Dan Moran, a third-generation diamond expert and owner of LA-based fine jeweler Concierge Diamonds.', 'Moran said the typical buyer of man-made diamonds is typically younger than 40 and very budget conscious.', 'Mined diamonds have a controversial history that’s tied to the use of child labor in some African diamond mines as well as sales of illegally-traded “conflict diamonds” that fund conflict in war-torn areas.', 'Among Millennials and Gen Z, their eco-conscious mindset and ethical concerns about natural diamond sourcing is another factor influencing their preference for non-traditional engagement rings, according to a report from wedding planning website The Knot.', 'Although its slice is growing, the market share for man-made diamonds remains relatively small.', 'Currently, about 7% of the specialty diamond jewelry market is represented by man-made diamonds, up from 3% in 2020, said Golan.', 'Some major jewelry retailers are driving the effort to take man-made diamonds mainstream.', 'In 2021, the world’s largest jewelry company, Pandora (PANDY), made a major shift by announcing it would stop using mined diamonds and would swap to lab-created diamonds in its jewelry.', 'Pandora said it’s instituting the change as part of an effort to sell sustainable jewelry, and also because consumers increasingly are asking for it.', 'Signet, (SIG) the largest jewelry company in the United States (which owns Zales, Kay Jewelers and Jared chains) called out the popularity of lab diamond jewelry in its March earnings call with analysts.', 'Calling it a “fast-growing category” in its jewelry portfolio, Signet CEO Virginia Drosos told analysts that lab-created diamonds are among the big jewelry trends she expects this year.', 'The company said it has expanded its man-made bridal jewelry selection in both its Zales and Kay Jewelers stores in response to the increased demand.', 'Fine jewelry brand Charles and Colvard, which makes lab-created diamonds, said consumers don’t just want to look good with the jewelry they are wearing, they also want to feel good about it.', '“As the momentum for conscious consumerism grows, the surge towards lab grown diamonds isn’t surprising,” said Don O’Connell, president and CEO of Charles & Colvard. “[', 'Consumers] want to know the origins of their stones and be reassured they’re conflict-free.', 'They’re embracing the choice to purchase a piece of fine jewelry that aligns with their values.”', 'Lab-grown diamond brand VRAI said the pandemic, too, has sparked attention and action toward social and environmental issues.', 'It said consumers are being more thoughtful and reassessing their purchasing habits, as well as the companies and industries they are supporting.', 'There is, however, one important consideration for anyone buying lab-created diamonds: Man-made diamonds have little resale value.', 'So while you may not be able to tell a natural diamond from a factory made variety, someone with a trained eye can, said Golan.', 'Once a stone is identified as a factory diamond, even though you paid a lot less for it, you also won’t get much for it.', 'But the value of a ring isn’t just monetary.', '“As a professional in the industry, I am asked all the time by people about what I think about a ring they have,” said Moran, of Concierge Jewelers. “', 'I always say, if you love it, be happy with it.', 'An engagement ring is a symbol of commitment and enduring love.”']",0.3714494325159568,"He said March data showed the number of engagement rings sold that featured a manufactured diamond jumped 63% compared to last year, while the number of engagement rings sold with a natural diamond declined 25% in the same period.",Mined diamonds have a controversial history that’s tied to the use of child labor in some African diamond mines as well as sales of illegally-traded “conflict diamonds” that fund conflict in war-torn areas.,0.8542834222316742,"Currently, about 7% of the specialty diamond jewelry market is represented by man-made diamonds, up from 3% in 2020, said Golan.","This makes natural diamonds quite a bit more expensive, and prices are likely to rise as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has tightened the supply chain for natural raw diamonds.",2024-05-21 Media giants lean on sports as Hollywood strikes still loom over content slates,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/18/media-upfronts-sports-hollywood-strikes.html,2024-05-21T19:11:01+0000,"Media giants relied on sports last year when they had to woo advertisers during the Upfronts meeting week at a time when a Hollywood strike and cost cutting bit into their content and star power.This year, while stars once again graced the stages following the end of the strikes, the presentations still leaned more on sports than scripted shows.The hangover from last year's work pause meant some media companies had fewer series and movies to highlight during their presentations. Cost cutting from companies including Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery didn't help matters.Live sports remained the darling of the Upfront meetings, as it still beckons the biggest audiences, and, therefore, the most advertising dollars.""I think [the companies] benefited in terms of earnings during the strike. And I think there was hesitance to ramp up because of all the issues of trying to understand how content expenditure was really driving return,"" said Tom Rogers, Oorbit Gaming and Entertainment executive chairman and former NBC Cable president.""There used to be this kind of automatic, where you put out a certain amount of programs for the new season and it was relatively formulaic without much sense of being able to understand how content drove profitability,"" he added.He noted two key issues for the traditional media companies: the decline of traditional TV and the increasing fees companies have to pay to air live sports.""If you're going to maintain a reduced level of content spending, by definition, that means your entertainment programming has to be reduced,"" Rogers said.Disney played up trailers for the upcoming Disney+ series ""Agatha All Along"" and ""Daredevil: Born Again,"" but for its cable network FX, only highlighted the next season of the popular series ""The Bear,"" which also streams on Hulu. The company also announced the ""Golden Bachelorette,"" the next installment in the popular reality series on broadcast network ABC.Warner Bros. Discovery put series like ""House of the Dragon"" and ""And Just Like That"" — both spinoffs of HBO series — front and center.""A strong content slate — be it sports or entertainment — is only one piece of the puzzle, however,"" said Amy Leifer, chief advertising sales officer at DIRECTV Advertising. ""With the explosive growth of [ad-supported streaming], the modern TV experience is as dependent on content as it is on the ads that support it.""Some films played a big role in the Upfronts, especially after streaming services like NBCUniversal's Peacock got a boost from blockbusters like ""Oppenheimer"" recently.Comcast's NBCUniversal focused on the upcoming musical film ""Wicked,"" and the renewal of some Peacock original series.The summer movie box-office season, which runs from the first weekend in May though Labor Day, is expected to shrink around $800 million this year as the season brings a limited and unsteady stream of blockbuster films. It follows a second quarter that lagged nearly 50% behind ticket sales seen during the same period last year.The movie calendar is expected to ramp up in the fourth quarter, with major titles like Warner Bros.' ""Joker: Folie a Deux,"" Paramount's ""Gladiator II,"" Disney Animation's ""Moana 2"" and Universal's ""Wicked"" arriving in cinemas. Calendar 2025 and 2026 are slated to have a significant boost in titles, including features from major franchises like Marvel, Star Wars, Batman, Super Mario Bros. and rollover tickets from a third Avatar film.Meanwhile, tech giants like Netflix and Amazon Prime Video that recently added cheaper, ad-supported tiers to their streaming platforms entered Upfronts week in full force, showcasing not only sports but also upcoming films and series.Amazon, which now owns MGM Studios, noted the renewals and upcoming seasons of original series such as ""Mr. and Mrs. Smith,"" ""The Boys,"" and ""The Summer I Turned Pretty."" Actor Jake Gyllenhaal announced a sequel to ""Roadhouse,"" and Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon discussed their film, ""You're Cordially Invited.""Netflix, meanwhile, announced the sequel to Adam Sandler's ""Happy Gilmore,"" as well as a slate of other series.The NFL once again reigned supreme at most Upfront presentations this year.Tentpole sports programming from the Summer Olympics to the NBA — which beckon the biggest TV and streaming audiences, and vast amounts of advertising dollars — were also key parts of the presentations.""We often hear from top clients that the significance of upfront buying has diminished outside of securing placements in live sports,"" said Mike Dupree, chief revenue officer at Teads, a global premium publishing platform. ""Access to quality content in an on-demand world has reduced the scarcity that historically drove the upfront model. Live sports seems to be the last bastion, as proven through rights renegotiations.""NBCUniversal dedicated much of its presentation on the upcoming Summer Olympics in Paris. The NFL played a role in all presentations, including for the newcomer to the ad-supported streaming landscape, Netflix. It made perhaps the biggest sports splash during Upfronts week, when it was announced hours before its presentation that it reached a deal to air NFL games on Christmas Day over the next three years.Amazon showcased Thursday Night Football, its second Black Friday game, and an upcoming wild card playoff game in January — the first ever for Prime.""This year, we saw media giants banking on big bets like ""Wicked,"" the Olympics, and sports superstars like Jason Kelce to generate buzz,"" said Tim Hurd, vice president of media activation at digital marketing agency Goodway Group. ""There was a lot of excitement around the evolving live sports landscape and leveraging college sports, NFL games, and the Olympics as an omni-platform experience.""Kelce, who recently retired from the NFL after 13 years with the Philadelphia Eagles, appeared at Disney's upfront to announce he would be a commentator for ESPN beginning this season. His appearance made headlines — as he and brother Travis Kelce are prone to doing — when he picked up ""Abbott Elementary"" star and creator Quinta Brunson during the event.— Sarah Whitten contributed to this article.Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.",CNBC,21/05/2024,"['Media giants relied on sports last year when they had to woo advertisers during the Upfronts meeting week at a time when a Hollywood strike and cost cutting bit into their content and star power.', 'This year, while stars once again graced the stages following the end of the strikes, the presentations still leaned more on sports than scripted shows.', ""The hangover from last year's work pause meant some media companies had fewer series and movies to highlight during their presentations."", ""Cost cutting from companies including Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery didn't help matters."", 'Live sports remained the darling of the Upfront meetings, as it still beckons the biggest audiences, and, therefore, the most advertising dollars.', '""I think [the companies] benefited in terms of earnings during the strike.', 'And I think there was hesitance to ramp up because of all the issues of trying to understand how content expenditure was really driving return,"" said Tom Rogers,Oorbit Gaming and Entertainment executive chairman and former NBC Cable president.', '""There used to be this kind of automatic, where you put out a certain amount of programs for the new season and it was relatively formulaic without much sense of being able to understand how content drove profitability,"" he added.', 'He noted two key issues for the traditional media companies: the decline of traditional TV and the increasing fees companies have to pay to air live sports.', '""If you\'re going to maintain a reduced level of content spending, by definition, that means your entertainment programming has to be reduced,"" Rogers said.', 'Disney played up trailers for the upcoming Disney+ series ""Agatha All Along"" and ""Daredevil: Born Again,"" but for its cable network FX, only highlighted the next season of the popular series ""The Bear,"" which also streams on Hulu.', 'The company also announced the ""Golden Bachelorette,"" the next installment in the popular reality series on broadcast network ABC.Warner Bros. Discovery put series like ""House of the Dragon"" and ""And Just Like That"" — both spinoffs of HBO series — front and center.', '""A strong content slate — be it sports or entertainment — is only one piece of the puzzle, however,"" said Amy Leifer, chief advertising sales officer at DIRECTV Advertising. ""', 'With the explosive growth of [ad-supported streaming], the modern TV experience is as dependent on content as it is on the ads that support it.', '""Some films played a big role in the Upfronts, especially after streaming services like NBCUniversal\'s Peacock got a boost from blockbusters like ""Oppenheimer"" recently.', 'Comcast\'s NBCUniversal focused on the upcoming musical film ""Wicked,"" and the renewal of some Peacock original series.', 'The summer movie box-office season, which runs from the first weekend in May though Labor Day, is expected to shrink around $800 million this year as the season brings a limited and unsteady stream of blockbuster films.', 'It follows a second quarter that lagged nearly 50% behind ticket sales seen during the same period last year.', 'The movie calendar is expected to ramp up in the fourth quarter, with major titles like Warner Bros.\' ""Joker: Folie a Deux,"" Paramount\'s ""Gladiator II,"" Disney Animation\'s ""Moana 2"" and Universal\'s ""Wicked"" arriving in cinemas.', 'Calendar 2025 and 2026 are slated to have a significant boost in titles, including features from major franchises like Marvel, Star Wars, Batman, Super Mario Bros. and rollover tickets from a third Avatar film.', 'Meanwhile, tech giants like Netflix and Amazon Prime Video that recently added cheaper, ad-supported tiers to their streaming platforms entered Upfronts week in full force, showcasing not only sports but also upcoming films and series.', 'Amazon, which now owns MGM Studios, noted the renewals and upcoming seasons of original series such as ""Mr. and Mrs. Smith,"" ""The Boys,"" and ""The Summer I Turned Pretty.""', 'Actor Jake Gyllenhaal announced a sequel to ""Roadhouse,"" and Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon discussed their film, ""You\'re Cordially Invited.', '""Netflix, meanwhile, announced the sequel to Adam Sandler\'s ""Happy Gilmore,"" as well as a slate of other series.', 'The NFL once again reigned supreme at most Upfront presentations this year.', 'Tentpole sports programming from the Summer Olympics to the NBA — which beckon the biggest TV and streaming audiences, and vast amounts of advertising dollars — were also key parts of the presentations.', '""We often hear from top clients that the significance of upfront buying has diminished outside of securing placements in live sports,"" said Mike Dupree, chief revenue officer at Teads, a global premium publishing platform. ""', 'Access to quality content in an on-demand world has reduced the scarcity that historically drove the upfront model.', 'Live sports seems to be the last bastion, as proven through rights renegotiations.', '""NBCUniversal dedicated much of its presentation on the upcoming Summer Olympics in Paris.', 'The NFL played a role in all presentations, including for the newcomer to the ad-supported streaming landscape, Netflix.', 'It made perhaps the biggest sports splash during Upfronts week, when it was announced hours before its presentation that it reached a deal to air NFL games on Christmas Day over the next three years.', 'Amazon showcased Thursday Night Football, its second Black Friday game, and an upcoming wild card playoff game in January — the first ever for Prime.', '""This year, we saw media giants banking on big bets like ""Wicked,"" the Olympics, and sports superstars like Jason Kelce to generate buzz,"" said Tim Hurd, vice president of media activation at digital marketing agency Goodway Group. ""', 'There was a lot of excitement around the evolving live sports landscape and leveraging college sports, NFL games, and the Olympics as an omni-platform experience.', '""Kelce, who recently retired from the NFL after 13 years with the Philadelphia Eagles, appeared at Disney\'s upfront to announce he would be a commentator for ESPN beginning this season.', 'His appearance made headlines — as he and brother Travis Kelce are prone to doing — when he picked up ""Abbott Elementary"" star and creator Quinta Brunson during the event.—', 'Sarah Whitten contributed to this article.', 'Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.']",0.316452400480072,"Calendar 2025 and 2026 are slated to have a significant boost in titles, including features from major franchises like Marvel, Star Wars, Batman, Super Mario Bros. and rollover tickets from a third Avatar film.",It follows a second quarter that lagged nearly 50% behind ticket sales seen during the same period last year.,0.1278516389429569,"Calendar 2025 and 2026 are slated to have a significant boost in titles, including features from major franchises like Marvel, Star Wars, Batman, Super Mario Bros. and rollover tickets from a third Avatar film.",It follows a second quarter that lagged nearly 50% behind ticket sales seen during the same period last year.,2024-05-21 FDA approves Amgen's treatment for most deadly form of lung cancer,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/fda-approves-amgen-small-cell-lung-cancer-treatment.html,2024-05-16T21:47:17+0000,"In this articleThe Food and Drug Administration on Thursday approved Amgen's therapy for patients with the most deadly form of lung cancer. The agency cleared the drug, which will be marketed under the name Imdelltra, as a second or later line of treatment for people with advanced small-cell lung cancer. That means patients can take the drug if their cancer progresses while on or after trying one other form of treatment, which is typically a type of chemotherapy. Amgen's drug is also known by its generic name tarlatamab.In clinical trials, Amgen's drug has been shown to reduce tumor growth and help people with small-cell lung cancer live significantly longer.Of the more than 2.2 million patients who are diagnosed with lung cancer worldwide each year, small-cell lung cancer comprises 15%, or 330,000, of those cases, Amgen said. Around 80% to 85% of people with small-cell lung cancer are diagnosed with an advanced stage of the disease, according to a study published in the Journal of Cancer.There are around 35,000 patients with small-cell lung cancer in the U.S., Dr. Jay Bradner, Amgen's chief scientific officer, told CNBC. Small-cell lung cancer usually starts in the airways of the lung and grows rapidly, creating large tumors and spreading throughout the body. Symptoms include bloody phlegm, cough, chest pain and shortness of breath.Only 3% of patients with small-cell lung cancer that has spread to other parts of the body live past 5 years, according to the American Cancer Society. That five-year survival rate accounts for 7% among all patients with the condition, regardless of whether the cancer spreads. Bradner said patients with small-cell lung cancer typically have four to five months to live.Lynne Bell, a small-cell lung cancer patient from Atlanta, Georgia, is an exception. She says she was ""horrified"" and ""in a dark place"" after she was diagnosed with an advanced stage of the condition in 2021.But she started taking Amgen's Imdelltra in an ongoing clinical trial in September after other treatments, including chemotherapy, stopped working. Since then, Bell said her tumors have shrunk significantly and cancer scans ""look great."" She said she specifically noticed her pain go away after taking a second dose of Amgen's drug.When asked how long she would continue Imdelltra, Bell said, ""If this medication is working and I'm not having any side effects, I'm good to go. I'm in it to win it.""Maida Mangiameli, a small-cell lung cancer advocate and patient mentor from Naperville, Illinois, is also a survivor of the devastating disease. She was diagnosed with an advanced stage of the condition in 2018 but was deemed in remission this year, meaning the treatment she received has reduced the signs and symptoms of the cancer. Mangiameli has been in remission for five years. Her treatments included chemotherapy and 28 days of radiation therapy. She told CNBC that Amgen's Imdelltra may ""not be something for me, but it might be down the road."" Mangiameli added that she's excited to know that there will be another therapy option for other patients suffering from small-cell lung cancer. She said the development of new treatments for the disease has been ""on the back burner"" for several years. Amgen's Bradner also said treatment options ""are pretty meager."" ""It's just one of the most dreadful cancers and so we needed a new solution,"" he said. Amgen's drug is called a bispecific T-cell engager, which is designed to redirect the immune system's T-cells to recognize and kill cancer cells. The approval is based on results from a phase two trial that followed more than 200 patients with small-cell lung cancer. Cancer tumors shrank in 40% of people who were given a 10-milligram dose of Imdelltra every 2 weeks.Notably, the median time that people lived after starting 10-milligram doses of Amgen's drug was 14.3 months. That compares with around six to 12 months with current treatments, according to the National Cancer Institute. ""These patients who would normally only have four to five months enjoy almost another full year of life,"" Bradner told CNBC. That time can make a huge difference for patients. For Mangiameli, receiving treatment for small-cell lung cancer gave her years to get closer to her grandchild, who was born not long before she was diagnosed with the disease. ""I had the impetus, the drive to make sure I survived. … I just had my first grandchild, I have to live long enough for us to become pals,"" Mangiameli said. Meanwhile, Bell said taking Imdelltra gave her the time to travel; she went on a trip with her daughter to San Diego.""I'm trying to go as many places that I can get to,"" Bell told CNBC.Amgen is continuing to study Imdelltra in several trials, including some that will test the drug as an earlier line of treatment for small-cell lung cancer. That includes a late-stage trial comparing Imdelltra with chemotherapy as a second-line treatment for the disease. Amgen also plans to start another phase three study on the drug as a first-line treatment for patients at an advanced stage of small-cell lung cancer. ""What makes us hopeful is, as you develop cancer medicines, that if they work in later stages of the disease, they can work even better when you move them"" to first-line treatment, Bradner said.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"[""In this articleThe Food and Drug Administration on Thursday approved Amgen's therapy for patients with the most deadly form of lung cancer."", 'The agency cleared the drug, which will be marketed under the name Imdelltra, as a second or later line of treatment for people with advanced small-cell lung cancer.', 'That means patients can take the drug if their cancer progresses while on or after trying one other form of treatment, which is typically a type of chemotherapy.', ""Amgen's drug is also known by its generic name tarlatamab."", ""In clinical trials, Amgen's drug has been shown to reduce tumor growth and help people with small-cell lung cancer live significantly longer."", 'Of the more than 2.2 million patients who are diagnosed with lung cancer worldwide each year, small-cell lung cancer comprises 15%, or 330,000, of those cases, Amgen said.', 'Around 80% to 85% of people with small-cell lung cancer are diagnosed with an advanced stage of the disease, according to a study published in the Journal of Cancer.', ""There are around 35,000 patients with small-cell lung cancer in the U.S., Dr. Jay Bradner, Amgen's chief scientific officer, told CNBC.Small-cell lung cancer usually starts in the airways of the lung and grows rapidly, creating large tumors and spreading throughout the body."", 'Symptoms include bloody phlegm, cough, chest pain and shortness of breath.', 'Only 3% of patients with small-cell lung cancer that has spread to other parts of the body live past 5 years, according to the American Cancer Society.', 'That five-year survival rate accounts for 7% among all patients with the condition, regardless of whether the cancer spreads.', 'Bradner said patients with small-cell lung cancer typically have four to five months to live.', 'Lynne Bell, a small-cell lung cancer patient from Atlanta, Georgia, is an exception.', 'She says she was ""horrified"" and ""in a dark place"" after she was diagnosed with an advanced stage of the condition in 2021.But she started taking Amgen\'s Imdelltra in an ongoing clinical trial in September after other treatments, including chemotherapy, stopped working.', 'Since then, Bell said her tumors have shrunk significantly and cancer scans ""look great.""', ""She said she specifically noticed her pain go away after taking a second dose of Amgen's drug."", 'When asked how long she would continue Imdelltra, Bell said, ""If this medication is working and I\'m not having any side effects, I\'m good to go.', ""I'm in it to win it."", '""Maida Mangiameli, a small-cell lung cancer advocate and patient mentor from Naperville, Illinois, is also a survivor of the devastating disease.', 'She was diagnosed with an advanced stage of the condition in 2018 but was deemed in remission this year, meaning the treatment she received has reduced the signs and symptoms of the cancer.', 'Mangiameli has been in remission for five years.', 'Her treatments included chemotherapy and 28 days of radiation therapy.', 'She told CNBC that Amgen\'s Imdelltra may ""not be something for me, but it might be down the road.', '""Mangiameli added that she\'s excited to know that there will be another therapy option for other patients suffering from small-cell lung cancer.', 'She said the development of new treatments for the disease has been ""on the back burner"" for several years.', 'Amgen\'s Bradner also said treatment options ""are pretty meager.', '""""It\'s just one of the most dreadful cancers and so we needed a new solution,"" he said.', ""Amgen's drug is called a bispecific T-cell engager, which is designed to redirect the immune system's T-cells to recognize and kill cancer cells."", 'The approval is based on results from a phase two trial that followed more than 200 patients with small-cell lung cancer.', 'Cancer tumors shrank in 40% of people who were given a 10-milligram dose of Imdelltra every 2 weeks.', ""Notably, the median time that people lived after starting 10-milligram doses of Amgen's drug was 14.3 months."", 'That compares with around six to 12 months with current treatments, according to the National Cancer Institute.', '""These patients who would normally only have four to five months enjoy almost another full year of life,"" Bradner told CNBC.That time can make a huge difference for patients.', 'For Mangiameli, receiving treatment for small-cell lung cancer gave her years to get closer to her grandchild, who was born not long before she was diagnosed with the disease.', '""I had the impetus, the drive to make sure I survived. …', 'I just had my first grandchild, I have to live long enough for us to become pals,"" Mangiameli said.', 'Meanwhile, Bell said taking Imdelltra gave her the time to travel; she went on a trip with her daughter to San Diego.', '""I\'m trying to go as many places that I can get to,"" Bell told CNBC.Amgen is continuing to study Imdelltra in several trials, including some that will test the drug as an earlier line of treatment for small-cell lung cancer.', 'That includes a late-stage trial comparing Imdelltra with chemotherapy as a second-line treatment for the disease.', 'Amgen also plans to start another phase three study on the drug as a first-line treatment for patients at an advanced stage of small-cell lung cancer.', '""What makes us hopeful is, as you develop cancer medicines, that if they work in later stages of the disease, they can work even better when you move them"" to first-line treatment, Bradner said.']",-0.3129286844652374,"""I had the impetus, the drive to make sure I survived. …","Of the more than 2.2 million patients who are diagnosed with lung cancer worldwide each year, small-cell lung cancer comprises 15%, or 330,000, of those cases, Amgen said.",0.3947548912121699,"""What makes us hopeful is, as you develop cancer medicines, that if they work in later stages of the disease, they can work even better when you move them"" to first-line treatment, Bradner said.","Amgen's Bradner also said treatment options ""are pretty meager.",2024-05-21 Virgin Trains makes bid to return to West Coast Main Line,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3ggn8k166xo,2024-05-19T13:35:50.495Z,"Virgin Trains could return to running rail services on the West Coast route between London and Glasgow five years after losing the franchise. It means that Virgin would be competing with Avanti West Coast, the train company it lost the contract to in 2019. Virgin Trains had operated the service, which runs from London Euston via Birmingham and Manchester to Scotland, for 22 years before it was disqualified from bidding for the franchise. Virgin Group confirmed to the BBC that it had applied to the Office of Rail and Road, the regulator, for an Open Access licence. Under this type of licence, a firm does not receive any state subsidies and takes on the risk of running a rail service itself. In contrast, a franchised operator, such as Avanti, holds a contract with the government to run the route. A spokesperson for Virgin Group said: ""While this application is just the first step towards exploring what might be possible, we think Open Access is the way forward. ""Open Access increases consumer choice and competition both of which Virgin has always supported."" Since taking over the franchise, Avanti has faced fierce criticism over delays and cancellations. Last September, the Department for Transport (DfT) renewed Avanti West Coast's contract for up to nine years. The company is a joint venture between FirstGroup and Trenitalia, an Italian train operator. But in March this year, Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham called for Avanti to be stripped of the contract. “I’ve completely run out of patience. I cannot accept this railway line being left in this perennial state of chaos,” he said. The DfT ruled out such a move, stating that it ""would just cause more upheaval for passengers rather than solving the challenges the operator is facing"". Virgin Group said that it has applied to run services between London Euston to Preston and Rochdale via Manchester and Bolton in the north west as well as to Birmingham, Liverpool and Glasgow. The previous train company was a joint venture between Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Group and Stagecoach, the Scottish bus and rail company. But a spokesperson for Virgin said that it had had made the application independently. If it was successful, it would manage the trains itself. When Virgin Trains lost the contract, it had provided almost 500 million journeys. Sir Richard said at the time that he was ""devastated"". Its partner, Stagecoach had been disqualified from bidding for that franchise as well as two others because, according to the DfT, it did not meet rules about pensions and future funding. Just last year, Sir Richard had hinted that he wanted to get into the rail business. He told the Financial Times in December: “I would not be surprised if one day Virgin is not back in trains.” A spokesperson for the group said: “Virgin is exceptionally proud of everything Virgin Trains and its wonderful onboard teams achieved in the UK. ""We’re confident customers would welcome Virgin Trains back, providing them with much-needed choice and competition.” ",BBC,19/05/2024,"['Virgin Trains could return to running rail services on the West Coast route between London and Glasgow five years after losing the franchise.', 'It means that Virgin would be competing with Avanti West Coast, the train company it lost the contract to in 2019.', 'Virgin Trains had operated the service, which runs from London Euston via Birmingham and Manchester to Scotland, for 22 years before it was disqualified from bidding for the franchise.', 'Virgin Group confirmed to the BBC that it had applied to the Office of Rail and Road, the regulator, for an Open Access licence.', 'Under this type of licence, a firm does not receive any state subsidies and takes on the risk of running a rail service itself.', 'In contrast, a franchised operator, such as Avanti, holds a contract with the government to run the route.', 'A spokesperson for Virgin Group said: ""While this application is just the first step towards exploring what might be possible, we think Open Access is the way forward. ""', 'Open Access increases consumer choice and competition both of which Virgin has always supported.""', 'Since taking over the franchise, Avanti has faced fierce criticism over delays and cancellations.', ""Last September, the Department for Transport (DfT) renewed Avanti West Coast's contract for up to nine years."", 'The company is a joint venture between FirstGroup and Trenitalia, an Italian train operator.', 'But in March this year, Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham called for Avanti to be stripped of the contract. “', 'I’ve completely run out of patience.', 'I cannot accept this railway line being left in this perennial state of chaos,” he said.', 'The DfT ruled out such a move, stating that it ""would just cause more upheaval for passengers rather than solving the challenges the operator is facing"".', 'Virgin Group said that it has applied to run services between London Euston to Preston and Rochdale via Manchester and Bolton in the north west as well as to Birmingham, Liverpool and Glasgow.', ""The previous train company was a joint venture between Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Group and Stagecoach, the Scottish bus and rail company."", 'But a spokesperson for Virgin said that it had had made the application independently.', 'If it was successful, it would manage the trains itself.', 'When Virgin Trains lost the contract, it had provided almost 500 million journeys.', 'Sir Richard said at the time that he was ""devastated"".', 'Its partner, Stagecoach had been disqualified from bidding for that franchise as well as two others because, according to the DfT, it did not meet rules about pensions and future funding.', 'Just last year, Sir Richard had hinted that he wanted to get into the rail business.', 'He told the Financial Times in December: “I would not be surprised if one day Virgin is not back in trains.”', 'A spokesperson for the group said: “Virgin is exceptionally proud of everything Virgin Trains and its wonderful onboard teams achieved in the UK. ""', 'We’re confident customers would welcome Virgin Trains back, providing them with much-needed choice and competition.”']",-0.0080180115134046,"A spokesperson for the group said: “Virgin is exceptionally proud of everything Virgin Trains and its wonderful onboard teams achieved in the UK. ""","I cannot accept this railway line being left in this perennial state of chaos,” he said.",-0.0019230991601943,"We’re confident customers would welcome Virgin Trains back, providing them with much-needed choice and competition.”","The DfT ruled out such a move, stating that it ""would just cause more upheaval for passengers rather than solving the challenges the operator is facing"".",2024-05-21 High inflation made finances worse for 65% of Americans last year,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/21/economy/economic-wellbeing-2023-inflation/index.html," Updated 12:13 PM EDT, Tue May 21, 2024 ","Inflation may have slowed last year, but it continued to deal heavy blows — some devastating — on Americans’ livelihoods: Nearly two-thirds of US adults were worse off because of it, and roughly 1 in 6 couldn’t pay all their monthly bills, new Federal Reserve data shows. The Fed on Tuesday released its Economic Well-Being of US Households report for 2023, examining the financial lives of US adults and their families. The report found that 72% of adults surveyed said they were “doing okay” financially. That’s a tick lower than last year but well below the high of 78% hit in 2021 (and still above the record low of 62% in 2013). Inflation made the financial lives “worse” for 65% of US households, according to the report. Among those, 19% said it was “much worse.” The findings were drawn from the Fed’s 11th annual Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking, which looks at American’s economic health across a variety of areas, including employment, income, banking and credit, housing, retirement planning, student loans, childcare and even Buy Now, Pay Later usage. But even in a time when broad economic data highlights a remarkably resilient economy — job growth has been stellar and pay gains have been strong, which have helped fuel spending and keep the economy rolling — not everyone feels that upbeat. Three-plus years of high inflation have taken their toll on Americans’ wallets and their psyches. That was especially true in 2022, when US inflation hit 9.1%, its highest annual rate in more than 40 years. As of last month, annual inflation was 3.4%, according to the Consumer Price Index. Incomes grew healthily in 2023, but so did spending, the Fed report showed. Monthly budgets remained tight and more than half of adults didn’t have money left over after paying their expenses. This was especially true for lower-income adults, who reported higher instances of not having enough to eat, not being able to cover bills in full and skipping medical care. Overall, 17% of adults reported they could not pay all their bills in full in the month prior to the survey, which was conducted in October 2023. “The [Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking] provides valuable insight into the financial conditions of American households,” Fed Governor Michelle Bowman said in a release accompanying the report. “This perspective continues to help the Federal Reserve better understand how families are coping with the ongoing economic challenges they face.” The report showed improvement in people’s feelings about how their local economy fared — with 42% saying it was “good” or “excellent,” versus 38% the year before. However, that share is a far cry from how people felt pre-pandemic: In 2019, 63% felt their local economy was in good or excellent health. Zooming out to the national economy, it was a similar story: People’s perceptions improved from 2022 (22% last year, up from 18%), but they remain well below the 50% share notched in 2019. Tuesday’s report showed similar measures of financial resiliency to what was reported in 2022, with 63% of adults saying they’d be able to cover a $400 emergency expense with cash on hand. While that share is below the recent high of 68% hit in 2021, it’s well above what was seen during the past decade. In 2013, only 50% said they could pay for a $400 emergency expense with cash, Fed data shows. While the financial well-being was generally unchanged from 2022 for most Americans, Fed researchers highlighted one particular segment that saw a signifcant downward swing: Parents living with children under the age of 18. The share of respondents from that group who said they were “doing okay” fell to 64% from 69% in 2022 and from 75% in 2021. For those with younger children, child care expenses were considerable in 2023. Paid child care expenses amounted to 50% to 70% of what parents shelled out for their monthly housing payment, according to the report. Child care expenses, along with homeowners’ insurance, food sufficiency and caregiving responsibilities, were among the new topics discussed in the report. In terms of homeowners’ insurance, the report found that adults who have a higher risk of being financially affected by a natural disaster were less likely to be insured. Nearly 25% of homeowners who live in the South and make under $50,000 a year did not have homeowners’ insurance, the Fed found.",CNN,21/05/2024,"['Inflation may have slowed last year, but it continued to deal heavy blows — some devastating — on Americans’ livelihoods: Nearly two-thirds of US adults were worse off because of it, and roughly 1 in 6 couldn’t pay all their monthly bills, new Federal Reserve data shows.', 'The Fed on Tuesday released its Economic Well-Being of US Households report for 2023, examining the financial lives of US adults and their families.', 'The report found that 72% of adults surveyed said they were “doing okay” financially.', 'That’s a tick lower than last year but well below the high of 78% hit in 2021 (and still above the record low of 62% in 2013).', 'Inflation made the financial lives “worse” for 65% of US households, according to the report.', 'Among those, 19% said it was “much worse.”', 'The findings were drawn from the Fed’s 11th annual Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking, which looks at American’s economic health across a variety of areas, including employment, income, banking and credit, housing, retirement planning, student loans, childcare and even Buy Now, Pay Later usage.', 'But even in a time when broad economic data highlights a remarkably resilient economy — job growth has been stellar and pay gains have been strong, which have helped fuel spending and keep the economy rolling — not everyone feels that upbeat.', 'Three-plus years of high inflation have taken their toll on Americans’ wallets and their psyches.', 'That was especially true in 2022, when US inflation hit 9.1%, its highest annual rate in more than 40 years.', 'As of last month, annual inflation was 3.4%, according to the Consumer Price Index.', 'Incomes grew healthily in 2023, but so did spending, the Fed report showed.', 'Monthly budgets remained tight and more than half of adults didn’t have money left over after paying their expenses.', 'This was especially true for lower-income adults, who reported higher instances of not having enough to eat, not being able to cover bills in full and skipping medical care.', 'Overall, 17% of adults reported they could not pay all their bills in full in the month prior to the survey, which was conducted in October 2023.', '“The [Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking] provides valuable insight into the financial conditions of American households,” Fed Governor Michelle Bowman said in a release accompanying the report. “', 'This perspective continues to help the Federal Reserve better understand how families are coping with the ongoing economic challenges they face.”', 'The report showed improvement in people’s feelings about how their local economy fared — with 42% saying it was “good” or “excellent,” versus 38% the year before.', 'However, that share is a far cry from how people felt pre-pandemic: In 2019, 63% felt their local economy was in good or excellent health.', 'Zooming out to the national economy, it was a similar story: People’s perceptions improved from 2022 (22% last year, up from 18%), but they remain well below the 50% share notched in 2019.', 'Tuesday’s report showed similar measures of financial resiliency to what was reported in 2022, with 63% of adults saying they’d be able to cover a $400 emergency expense with cash on hand.', 'While that share is below the recent high of 68% hit in 2021, it’s well above what was seen during the past decade.', 'In 2013, only 50% said they could pay for a $400 emergency expense with cash, Fed data shows.', 'While the financial well-being was generally unchanged from 2022 for most Americans, Fed researchers highlighted one particular segment that saw a signifcant downward swing: Parents living with children under the age of 18.', 'The share of respondents from that group who said they were “doing okay” fell to 64% from 69% in 2022 and from 75% in 2021.', 'For those with younger children, child care expenses were considerable in 2023.', 'Paid child care expenses amounted to 50% to 70% of what parents shelled out for their monthly housing payment, according to the report.', 'Child care expenses, along with homeowners’ insurance, food sufficiency and caregiving responsibilities, were among the new topics discussed in the report.', 'In terms of homeowners’ insurance, the report found that adults who have a higher risk of being financially affected by a natural disaster were less likely to be insured.', 'Nearly 25% of homeowners who live in the South and make under $50,000 a year did not have homeowners’ insurance, the Fed found.']",0.2038651517942035,"But even in a time when broad economic data highlights a remarkably resilient economy — job growth has been stellar and pay gains have been strong, which have helped fuel spending and keep the economy rolling — not everyone feels that upbeat.","Inflation may have slowed last year, but it continued to deal heavy blows — some devastating — on Americans’ livelihoods: Nearly two-thirds of US adults were worse off because of it, and roughly 1 in 6 couldn’t pay all their monthly bills, new Federal Reserve data shows.",-0.0744551474397832,"Incomes grew healthily in 2023, but so did spending, the Fed report showed.",The share of respondents from that group who said they were “doing okay” fell to 64% from 69% in 2022 and from 75% in 2021.,2024-05-21 "BMW, Jaguar and VW imported banned Xinjiang parts - Senate probe",https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cv2237rplg8o,2024-05-21T03:19:37.025Z,"BMW, Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) and Volkswagen (VW) used parts made by a supplier on a list of firms banned over alleged links to Chinese forced labour, a US congressional report has said. At least 8,000 BMW Mini Cooper cars were imported into the US with components from banned Chinese firm Sichuan Jingweida Technology Group (JWD), according to the report by Senate Finance Committee chairman Ron Wyden's staff. ""Automakers’ self-policing is clearly not doing the job,"" the Democrat Senator said. BMW said it had ""strict standards and policies regarding employment practices, human rights, and working conditions, which all our direct suppliers must follow"". It added it had taken steps to ""halt the importation of affected products and will be conducting a service action with customer and dealer notification for affected motor vehicles"". Jaguar Land Rover told the BBC it ""takes human rights and forced labour issues seriously and has an active ongoing programme of human rights protection and anti-slavery measures"". VW did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Mr Wyden also urged the US Customs and Border Protection agency to ""supercharge enforcement and crack down on companies that fuel the shameful use of forced labour in China"". The report added Jaguar Land Rover had imported spare parts which included components from JWD after the company was put on the banned list. JLR said it has now identified and is destroying any stock it holds around the world that include this component. In February, VW said thousands of its vehicles, including Porsches and Bentleys, had been held by authorities because they had a component in them that breached America's anti-forced labour laws. VW had voluntarily informed customs officials about the issue, the report said. Congress passed the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA) into law in 2021. The legislation is intended to prevent the import of goods from China's north-western Xinjiang region that are believed to have been made by people from the Uyghur minority group in forced labour conditions. JWD was added to the UFLPA Entity List in December 2023, which means its products are presumed to be made with forced labour. China has been accused of detaining more than one million Uyghurs in Xinjiang against their will over the past few years. Authorities have denied all allegations of human rights abuses in Xinjiang. “The so-called Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act by the US is not about forced labor but about creating unemployment. It does not protect human rights but, under the guise of human rights, harms the survival and employment rights of the people in Xinjiang,"" Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said. ""China strongly condemns and firmly opposes this. We will take measures to resolutely safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese enterprises.” ",BBC,21/05/2024,"['BMW, Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) and Volkswagen (VW) used parts made by a supplier on a list of firms banned over alleged links to Chinese forced labour, a US congressional report has said.', 'At least 8,000 BMW Mini Cooper cars were imported into the US with components from banned Chinese firm Sichuan Jingweida Technology Group (JWD), according to the report by Senate Finance Committee chairman Ron Wyden\'s staff. ""', 'Automakers’ self-policing is clearly not doing the job,"" the Democrat Senator said.', 'BMW said it had ""strict standards and policies regarding employment practices, human rights, and working conditions, which all our direct suppliers must follow"".', 'It added it had taken steps to ""halt the importation of affected products and will be conducting a service action with customer and dealer notification for affected motor vehicles"".', 'Jaguar Land Rover told the BBC it ""takes human rights and forced labour issues seriously and has an active ongoing programme of human rights protection and anti-slavery measures"".', 'VW did not immediately respond to a request for comment.', 'Mr Wyden also urged the US Customs and Border Protection agency to ""supercharge enforcement and crack down on companies that fuel the shameful use of forced labour in China"".', 'The report added Jaguar Land Rover had imported spare parts which included components from JWD after the company was put on the banned list.', 'JLR said it has now identified and is destroying any stock it holds around the world that include this component.', ""In February, VW said thousands of its vehicles, including Porsches and Bentleys, had been held by authorities because they had a component in them that breached America's anti-forced labour laws."", 'VW had voluntarily informed customs officials about the issue, the report said.', 'Congress passed the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA) into law in 2021.', ""The legislation is intended to prevent the import of goods from China's north-western Xinjiang region that are believed to have been made by people from the Uyghur minority group in forced labour conditions."", 'JWD was added to the UFLPA Entity List in December 2023, which means its products are presumed to be made with forced labour.', 'China has been accused of detaining more than one million Uyghurs in Xinjiang against their will over the past few years.', 'Authorities have denied all allegations of human rights abuses in Xinjiang. “', 'The so-called Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act by the US is not about forced labor but about creating unemployment.', 'It does not protect human rights but, under the guise of human rights, harms the survival and employment rights of the people in Xinjiang,"" Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said. ""', 'China strongly condemns and firmly opposes this.', 'We will take measures to resolutely safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese enterprises.”']",-0.3569157781414933,We will take measures to resolutely safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese enterprises.”,"Jaguar Land Rover told the BBC it ""takes human rights and forced labour issues seriously and has an active ongoing programme of human rights protection and anti-slavery measures"".",-0.938326338926951,,"It does not protect human rights but, under the guise of human rights, harms the survival and employment rights of the people in Xinjiang,"" Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said. """,2024-05-21 "Bilt’s May Rent Day promotion: Redeem points toward rent, get free home decor",https://edition.cnn.com/cnn-underscored/travel/bilt-rent-day-promotion," Updated 4:22 PM EDT, Thu April 25, 2024 ","The Bilt Mastercard® (see rates and fees) has been incredibly popular since its inception in 2021. With a top-notch travel rewards program and the opportunity to earn points on rent with no transaction fees (up to 100,000 points per calendar year), it’s no surprise to see the card flourish over the past few years. In addition, Bilt Rewards — the loyalty program behind the Bilt Mastercard — offers lucrative promotions throughout the year, with the most popular known as Rent Day. With Bilt’s Rent Day promotion — which runs the first of every month — card members earn double points on all purchases (excluding rent) and can take advantage of a unique promotion that changes every month. Bilt typically announces these promotions just a few days before Rent Day. Bilt Rewards just announced the May edition of its monthly Rent Day promotion, and for better or for worse, it’s different from offers we’ve seen in the past. Instead of a travel-related offer (which has been the norm), Bilt is incentivizing members to redeem points toward their monthly rent payment in exchange for a credit toward home decor products in the Bilt Home Collection. Additionally, Bilt recently announced a new partnership with Blade, a swanky helicopter transfer service that runs scheduled flights between New York City airports and Manhattan’s heliports. Let’s take a closer look at this upcoming Rent Day promotion and Bilt’s partnership with Blade. Between April 25 and May 1, Bilt members who redeem points toward their rent payment will get 100% of those points back to redeem toward items in the Bilt Home Collection. You can use a minimum of 1,000 points and a maximum of 50,000 points for this offer, and the Home Collection credit is good for six months. However, your points are only worth 0.55 cents apiece when you redeem them toward your rent payment. For example, if you redeem 10,000 points toward rent, you’ll get a $55 discount. Travel website The Points Guy values Bilt Rewards points at 2.05 cents apiece when redeemed toward travel, so this isn’t a great redemption in comparison. However, it might be worth considering this month if you’re looking for new home decor anyway. The Bilt Home Collection usually has things like artwork from partner artists, interesting vases and different types of cups. This month, Bilt will also offer curated Rent Day dining experiences at restaurants around the country. This includes unique tasting menus, wine pairings and omakase experiences. These dining experiences will cost $150, or you can redeem 15,000 Bilt points for you and a guest. Availability will be limited, but you can try to grab a seat on April 26. Those with Bilt elite status will receive priority access to reservations. Platinum status members will have first access at 12 p.m. EST, Gold status members at 12:10 p.m. EST and Silver status members at 12:20 p.m. EST. All other Bilt Rewards members can book at 12:30 p.m. EST. Dining experiences will be available at select restaurants in New York, Miami, Seattle, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Dallas, Boston and Washington, D.C. Every month on Rent Day, Bilt also gives members with the Bilt Mastercard a chance to earn double points on all purchases (excluding rent). So, if you have a new restaurant you want to check out, flights to book or any other purchases to make, it could be worth waiting until May 1 to earn more points on your purchase. And if you’re dining at a restaurant that participates in Bilt Dining, you can increase your earnings up to a whopping 11 points per dollar. But remember, to earn Bilt points with your Bilt Mastercard, you must use the card five times each statement period (see Rewards & Benefits). Earlier this month, Bilt announced a new partnership with Blade, where Bilt Reward members will earn bonus points on every Blade booking. Members will earn 2 bonus points for every dollar spent on Blade flights as long as they pay with a credit or debit card linked to their Bilt Rewards account. Again, you’ll get more Blade benefits if you have Bilt elite status. These are nice benefits to have if you live in New York. Blade has lounges at its heliports on West 30th Street and East 34th Street, both of which are outfitted with a complimentary bar, coffee and free snacks. If getting a discount on rent is your preferred way to redeem Bilt Rewards points, this month’s Rent Day promotion is a great way to earn bonus points to put toward furnishing your home. If you’d rather redeem toward travel, focus on earning double points on all purchases on May 1. Learn more and apply now for the Bilt Mastercard. Looking for a travel credit card? Find out which cards CNN Underscored Money chose as the best travel credit cards currently available.",CNN,25/04/2024,"['The Bilt Mastercard® (seerates and fees) has been incredibly popular since its inception in 2021.', 'With a top-notch travel rewards program and the opportunity to earn points on rent with no transaction fees (up to 100,000 points per calendar year), it’s no surprise to see the card flourish over the past few years.', 'In addition, Bilt Rewards —the loyalty program behind the Bilt Mastercard — offers lucrative promotions throughout the year, with the most popular known as Rent Day.', 'With Bilt’s Rent Day promotion —which runs the first of every month — card members earn double points on all purchases (excluding rent) and can take advantage of a unique promotion that changes every month.', 'Bilt typically announces these promotions just a few days before Rent Day.', 'Bilt Rewards just announced the May edition of its monthly Rent Day promotion, and for better or for worse, it’s different from offers we’ve seen in the past.', 'Instead of a travel-related offer (which has been the norm), Bilt is incentivizing members to redeem points toward their monthly rent payment in exchange for a credit toward home decor products in the Bilt Home Collection.', 'Additionally, Bilt recently announced a new partnership with Blade,a swanky helicopter transfer service that runs scheduled flights between New York City airports and Manhattan’s heliports.', 'Let’s take a closer look at this upcoming Rent Day promotion and Bilt’s partnership with Blade.', 'Between April 25 and May 1, Bilt members who redeem points toward their rent payment will get 100% of those points back to redeem toward items in the Bilt Home Collection.', 'You can use a minimum of 1,000 points and a maximum of 50,000 points for this offer, and the Home Collection credit is good for six months.', 'However, your points are only worth 0.55 cents apiece when you redeem them toward your rent payment.', 'For example, if you redeem 10,000 points toward rent, you’ll get a $55 discount.', 'Travel website The Points Guy values Bilt Rewards points at 2.05 cents apiece when redeemed toward travel, so this isn’t a great redemption in comparison.', 'However, it might be worth considering this month if you’re looking for new home decor anyway.', 'The Bilt Home Collection usually has things like artwork from partner artists, interesting vases and different types of cups.', 'This month, Bilt will also offer curated Rent Day dining experiences at restaurants around the country.', 'This includes unique tasting menus, wine pairings and omakase experiences.', 'These dining experiences will cost $150, or you can redeem 15,000 Bilt points for you and a guest.', 'Availability will be limited, but you can try to grab a seat on April 26.', 'Those with Bilt elite status will receive priority access to reservations.', 'Platinum status members will have first access at 12 p.m. EST, Gold status members at 12:10 p.m. EST and Silver status members at 12:20 p.m. EST.', 'All other Bilt Rewards members can book at 12:30 p.m. EST.', 'Dining experiences will be available at select restaurants in New York, Miami, Seattle, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Dallas, Boston and Washington, D.C. Every month on Rent Day, Bilt also gives members with the Bilt Mastercard a chance to earn double points on all purchases (excluding rent).', 'So, if you have a new restaurant you want to check out, flights to book or any other purchases to make, it could be worth waiting until May 1 to earn more points on your purchase.', 'And if you’re dining at a restaurant that participates in Bilt Dining, you can increase your earnings up to a whopping 11 points per dollar.', 'But remember, to earn Bilt points with your Bilt Mastercard, you must use the card five times each statement period (see Rewards & Benefits).', 'Earlier this month, Bilt announced a new partnership with Blade, where Bilt Reward members will earn bonus points on every Blade booking.', 'Members will earn 2 bonus points for every dollar spent on Blade flights as long as they pay with a credit or debit card linked to their Bilt Rewards account.', 'Again, you’ll get more Blade benefits if you have Bilt elite status.', 'These are nice benefits to have if you live in New York.', 'Blade has lounges at its heliports on West 30th Street and East 34th Street, both of which are outfitted with a complimentary bar, coffee and free snacks.', 'If getting a discount on rent is your preferred way to redeem Bilt Rewards points, this month’s Rent Day promotion is a great way to earn bonus points to put toward furnishing your home.', 'If you’d rather redeem toward travel, focus on earning double points on all purchases on May 1.', 'Learn more and apply now for the Bilt Mastercard.', 'Looking for a travel credit card?', 'Find out which cardsCNN Underscored Moneychose as thebest travel credit cardscurrently available.']",0.3487739443917381,"Travel website The Points Guy values Bilt Rewards points at 2.05 cents apiece when redeemed toward travel, so this isn’t a great redemption in comparison.",,0.978265517950058,"And if you’re dining at a restaurant that participates in Bilt Dining, you can increase your earnings up to a whopping 11 points per dollar.",,2024-05-21 Red Lobster files for bankruptcy,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/investing/red-lobster-restaurants-bankruptcy/index.html," Updated 2:59 PM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","Red Lobster, which brought affordable shrimp and lobster to middle-class America and grew to become the largest seafood restaurant chain in the world, has filed for bankruptcy. The company said it had more than $1 billion in debt and less than $30 million in cash on hand. It plans to sell its business to its lenders, and in turn, it will receive financing to stay afloat. It expects to continue to close restaurants in the meantime. Red Lobster, known for its cheddar bay biscuits, crab legs and shrimp dishes, spread around the country during the 1980s and 1990s. In 2016, Beyoncé mentioned Red Lobster in her song “Formation,” describing bringing a romantic partner to Red Lobster, causing sales to surge. With 578 restaurants across 44 states and Canada, Red Lobster serves 64 million customers a year, and it brings in $2 billion in annual sales, the company said in its bankruptcy filing. One in five lobster tails purchased in North America is bought by Red Lobster. But recent mismanagement, competition, inflation and other factors brought down Red Lobster, analysts and former Red Lobster employees say. Years of underinvestment in Red Lobster’s marketing, food quality, service and restaurant upgrades hurt the chain’s ability to compete with growing fast-casual and quick-service chains. Red Lobster started in 1968 by Bill Darden, an architect of the casual dining revolution in America, and General Mills soon bought the restaurant. Red Lobster later became part of Darden Restaurants, the owner of Olive Garden and other chains. In 2014, Darden sold off Red Lobster to Golden Gate Capital, a private equity firm, for $2.1 billion. Since 2020, seafood distributor Thai Union Group, based in Thailand, has been the largest Red Lobster shareholder. Thai Union owns 49% of the company. But Red Lobster has struggled under Thai Union. The number of customers coming to Red Lobster tumbled 30% since 2019 and has only slightly improved since the pandemic. Earlier this year, Thai Union said it would divest from Red Lobster and take a $530 million loss on its investment. Former Red Lobster employees say Thai Union’s cost-cutting efforts and strategy mistakes hurt the chain. “Thai Union forced huge cost reductions, including many that were penny wise and pound foolish because they hurt sales,” a former Red Lobster executive who spoke under the condition of anonymity because of a non-disclosure agreement with the company told CNN earlier this month. Thai Union did not respond to requests for comment on that article. Red Lobster executives began to run for the doors under Thai Union’s management, resulting in a huge amount of C-suite churn. Red Lobster has had five CEOs since 2021. In 2021 and 2022, Red Lobster brought on a new CEO, chief marketing officer, chief financial officer and chief information officer. All were gone within two years. Last summer, under Thai Union, Red Lobster turned $20 endless shrimp into a permanent item on the menu for the first time, instead of its traditional limited-time offer deal. The change cost the company $11 million and cut into Thai Union profit. In its bankruptcy filing, Red Lobster said it is investigating the circumstances of that promotion, which the company’s management opposed. “We need to be much more careful,” Thai Union CFO Ludovic Garnier said on an earnings call in November 2023. But the company in its bankruptcy filing blamed Thai Union for the losses. Noting that under the guise of a “quality review,” Red Lobster eliminated two of its breaded shrimp suppliers, leaving Thai Union with an exclusive deal. That led to higher costs for the restaurant chain, and did not comply with the company’s typical decision-making process for picking suppliers based on projected demand. The explosive growth and popularity of fast-casual chains like Chipotle and quick-service chains like Chick-fil-A over the past two decades also squeezed Red Lobster. Casual dining has slipped from 36% of total restaurant industry sales in 2013 to 31% in 2023, according to Technomic, a restaurant research firm. In its bankruptcy filing, Red Lobster conceded it had “a bloated and underperforming restaurant footprint” and cited a difficult economic environment and increased competition for its recent financial failures. Red Lobster has been telegraphing its bankruptcy for months. In January, the company hired Jonathan Tibus, a restructuring veteran, to assess its business. It named Tibus as CEO in March. Last week, the company began shutting down 93 restaurants in preparation for its bankruptcy. As it ran out of cash, the company stopped paying its vendors last year. The company plans to stay afloat with a $100 million financing agreement, it said in its bankruptcy petition. This story has been updated with additional developments and context.",CNN,20/05/2024,"['Red Lobster, which brought affordable shrimp and lobster to middle-class America and grew to become the largest seafood restaurant chain in the world, has filed for bankruptcy.', 'The company said it had more than $1 billion in debt and less than $30 million in cash on hand.', 'It plans to sell its business to its lenders, and in turn, it will receive financing to stay afloat.', 'It expects to continue to close restaurants in the meantime.', 'Red Lobster, known for its cheddar bay biscuits, crab legs and shrimp dishes, spread around the country during the 1980s and 1990s.', 'In 2016, Beyoncé mentioned Red Lobster in her song “Formation,” describing bringing a romantic partner to Red Lobster, causing sales to surge.', 'With 578 restaurants across 44 states and Canada, Red Lobster serves 64 million customers a year, and it brings in $2 billion in annual sales, the company said in its bankruptcy filing.', 'One in five lobster tails purchased in North America is bought by Red Lobster.', 'But recent mismanagement, competition, inflation and other factors brought down Red Lobster, analysts and former Red Lobster employees say.', 'Years of underinvestment in Red Lobster’s marketing, food quality, service and restaurant upgrades hurt the chain’s ability to compete with growing fast-casual and quick-service chains.', 'Red Lobster started in 1968 by Bill Darden, an architect of the casual dining revolution in America, and General Mills soon bought the restaurant.', 'Red Lobster later became part of Darden Restaurants, the owner of Olive Garden and other chains.', 'In 2014, Darden sold off Red Lobster to Golden Gate Capital, a private equity firm, for $2.1 billion.', 'Since 2020, seafood distributor Thai Union Group, based in Thailand, has been the largest Red Lobster shareholder.', 'Thai Union owns 49% of the company.', 'But Red Lobster has struggled under Thai Union.', 'The number of customers coming to Red Lobster tumbled 30% since 2019 and has only slightly improved since the pandemic.', 'Earlier this year, Thai Union said it would divest from Red Lobster and take a $530 million loss on its investment.', 'Former Red Lobster employees say Thai Union’s cost-cutting efforts and strategy mistakes hurt the chain.', '“Thai Union forced huge cost reductions, including many that were penny wise and pound foolish because they hurt sales,” a former Red Lobster executive who spoke under the condition of anonymity because of a non-disclosure agreement with the company told CNN earlier this month.', 'Thai Union did not respond to requests for comment on that article.', 'Red Lobster executives began to run for the doors under Thai Union’s management, resulting in a huge amount of C-suite churn.', 'Red Lobster has had five CEOs since 2021.', 'In 2021 and 2022, Red Lobster brought on a new CEO, chief marketing officer, chief financial officer and chief information officer.', 'All were gone within two years.', 'Last summer, under Thai Union, Red Lobster turned $20 endless shrimp into a permanent item on the menu for the first time, instead of its traditional limited-time offer deal.', 'The change cost the company $11 million and cut into Thai Union profit.', 'In its bankruptcy filing, Red Lobster said it is investigating the circumstances of that promotion, which the company’s management opposed.', '“We need to be much more careful,” Thai Union CFO Ludovic Garnier said on an earnings call in November 2023.', 'But the company in its bankruptcy filing blamed Thai Union for the losses.', 'Noting that under the guise of a “quality review,” Red Lobster eliminated two of its breaded shrimp suppliers, leaving Thai Union with an exclusive deal.', 'That led to higher costs for the restaurant chain, and did not comply with the company’s typical decision-making process for picking suppliers based on projected demand.', 'The explosive growth and popularity of fast-casual chains like Chipotle and quick-service chains like Chick-fil-A over the past two decades also squeezed Red Lobster.', 'Casual dining has slipped from 36% of total restaurant industry sales in 2013 to 31% in 2023, according to Technomic, a restaurant research firm.', 'In its bankruptcy filing, Red Lobster conceded it had “a bloated and underperforming restaurant footprint” and cited a difficult economic environment and increased competition for its recent financial failures.', 'Red Lobster has been telegraphing its bankruptcy for months.', 'In January, the company hired Jonathan Tibus, a restructuring veteran, to assess its business.', 'It named Tibus as CEO in March.', 'Last week, the company began shutting down 93 restaurants in preparation for its bankruptcy.', 'As it ran out of cash, the company stopped paying its vendors last year.', 'The company plans to stay afloat with a $100 million financing agreement, it said in its bankruptcy petition.', 'This story has been updated with additional developments and context.']",0.0087222652082627,The explosive growth and popularity of fast-casual chains like Chipotle and quick-service chains like Chick-fil-A over the past two decades also squeezed Red Lobster.,But the company in its bankruptcy filing blamed Thai Union for the losses.,-0.3643529415130615,The number of customers coming to Red Lobster tumbled 30% since 2019 and has only slightly improved since the pandemic.,"In its bankruptcy filing, Red Lobster conceded it had “a bloated and underperforming restaurant footprint” and cited a difficult economic environment and increased competition for its recent financial failures.",2024-05-21 "Taylor Swift fans are causing a spike in European air travel, United says",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/21/business/taylor-swift-tour-europe-travel-spike/index.html," Published 7:57 AM EDT, Tue May 21, 2024 ","Air travelers, are you ready for it? The official kickoff for summer this weekend is going to get even busier, thanks in part to Taylor Swift. United Airlines revealed that demand for flights to Lisbon, Portugal, where Swift is performing for her “Eras Tour,” shot up 25% for this weekend compared to last summer — and the surge is going to continue for the next few months as fans flock to Europe to for concert tickets that are thousands of dollars cheaper compared to the US. Bookings to other European cities where’s she’s performing in the coming weeks, including Madrid, Edinburgh and Dublin, are also surging, a United representative told CNN. United’s flights to Milan and Munich for Swift’s shows in July have captured the biggest increase in demand – upwards of 45% more passengers compared to last year. The airline flies to all of these cities from its East Coast hubs at Newark and Dulles, with some other destinations additionally linked from its other hubs in San Francisco, Denver, Chicago’s O’Hare and Houston. Delta Air Lines told CNN demand is on the rise for flights to her European tour. The airline said it is prepared as it flies its largest-ever international summer schedule by adding destinations and restoring routes that were cut because of the pandemic. Both airlines are bracing for record-breaking summer travel overall. Delta and United said it will fly nearly 3 million people during Memorial Day weekend, lasting from Thursday to next Monday, a 5% increase from last year. Airlines for America, a group representing major US airlines, predicts record numbers of passengers this summer, with carriers expected to fly 270 million passengers — up 6% from last year. The increase in bookings is just another example of “Swiftonomics,” the pop icon’s ability to influence the economies of the cities and countries that she visits on her mammoth global tour. More than 1 million Swifties will attend the superstar’s shows in the United Kingdom later this summer, with the typical fan expected to spend £642 ($810) on travel, accommodation and other expenses, injecting a total of £755 million ($953 million) into the economy, according to a recent Barclays report. “When it comes to cultural icons like Taylor Swift — like we saw with Elvis and Beatlemania in the 50s and 60s — supporters have such a strong connection to the artist and to the rest of the fandom that the desire to spend becomes even more powerful,” Dr. Peter Brooks, chief behavioral scientist at Barclays, said in the report. -CNN’s Anna Cooban contributed to this report.",CNN,21/05/2024,"['Air travelers, are you ready for it?', 'The official kickoff for summer this weekend is going to get even busier, thanks in part to Taylor Swift.', 'United Airlines revealed that demand for flights to Lisbon, Portugal, where Swift is performing for her “Eras Tour,” shot up 25% for this weekend compared to last summer — and the surge is going to continue for the next few months as fans flock to Europe to for concert tickets that are thousands of dollars cheaper compared to the US.', 'Bookings to other European cities where’s she’s performing in the coming weeks, including Madrid, Edinburgh and Dublin, are also surging, a United representative told CNN.', 'United’s flights to Milan and Munich for Swift’s shows in July have captured the biggest increase in demand – upwards of 45% more passengers compared to last year.', 'The airline flies to all of these cities from its East Coast hubs at Newark and Dulles, with some other destinations additionally linked from its other hubs in San Francisco, Denver, Chicago’s O’Hare and Houston.', 'Delta Air Lines told CNN demand is on the rise for flights to her European tour.', 'The airline said it is prepared as it flies its largest-ever international summer schedule by adding destinations and restoring routes that were cut because of the pandemic.', 'Both airlines are bracing for record-breaking summer travel overall.', 'Delta and United said it will fly nearly 3 million people during Memorial Day weekend, lasting from Thursday to next Monday, a 5% increase from last year.', 'Airlinesfor America, a grouprepresenting major USairlines, predicts record numbers of passengers this summer, with carriers expected to fly 270 million passengers — up6%fromlastyear.', 'The increase in bookings is just another example of “Swiftonomics,” the pop icon’s ability to influence the economies of the cities and countries that she visits on her mammoth global tour.', 'More than 1 million Swifties will attend the superstar’s shows in the United Kingdom later this summer, with the typical fan expected to spend £642 ($810) on travel, accommodation and other expenses, injecting a total of £755 million ($953 million) into the economy, according to a recent Barclays report.', '“When it comes to cultural icons like Taylor Swift — like we saw with Elvis and Beatlemania in the 50s and 60s — supporters have such a strong connection to the artist and to the rest of the fandom that the desire to spend becomes even more powerful,” Dr. Peter Brooks, chief behavioral scientist at Barclays, said in the report.', '-CNN’s Anna Cooban contributed to this report.']",0.3580058733475522,"“When it comes to cultural icons like Taylor Swift — like we saw with Elvis and Beatlemania in the 50s and 60s — supporters have such a strong connection to the artist and to the rest of the fandom that the desire to spend becomes even more powerful,” Dr. Peter Brooks, chief behavioral scientist at Barclays, said in the report.",,0.9529615461826324,"Airlinesfor America, a grouprepresenting major USairlines, predicts record numbers of passengers this summer, with carriers expected to fly 270 million passengers — up6%fromlastyear.",,2024-05-21 Class of 2024: How’s your job search going?,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/business/gradute-college-but-havent-been-hired-yet/index.html," Updated 4:23 PM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","By many measures, the US economy is in great shape. There are millions of job openings and the unemployment rate is low. In fact it hasn’t been this low for such a long stretch of time in decades. If you just graduated college, there’s a good chance people are telling you that you’re lucky you didn’t graduate when they did. That may include the onset of the pandemic, the Great Recession or any time the job market looked worse on paper than it does now. That said, getting a job straight out of college has never been easy. And oftentimes economic data can tell a different story than the reality people are experiencing. That’s why CNN wants to hear from the class of 2024 about your job searches, for possible inclusion in an upcoming story. Share your experience using the form below. We will not include anything in an upcoming article without first reaching out to you and interviewing you.",CNN,20/05/2024,"['By many measures, the US economy is in great shape.', 'There are millions of job openings and the unemployment rate is low.', 'In fact it hasn’t been this low for such a long stretch of time in decades.', 'If you just graduated college, there’s a good chance people are telling you that you’re lucky you didn’t graduate when they did.', 'That may include the onset of the pandemic, the Great Recession or any time the job market looked worse on paper than it does now.', 'That said, getting a job straight out of college has never been easy.', 'And oftentimes economic data can tell a different story than the reality people are experiencing.', 'That’s why CNN wants to hear from the class of 2024 about your job searches, for possible inclusion in an upcoming story.', 'Share your experience using the form below.', 'We will not include anything in an upcoming article without first reaching out to you and interviewing you.']",0.0324068230618718,"If you just graduated college, there’s a good chance people are telling you that you’re lucky you didn’t graduate when they did.",There are millions of job openings and the unemployment rate is low.,-0.0046736896038055,"By many measures, the US economy is in great shape.","That may include the onset of the pandemic, the Great Recession or any time the job market looked worse on paper than it does now.",2024-05-21 Red Lobster choked on its own shrimp supply,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/21/business/red-lobster-endless-shrimp-bankruptcy/index.html," Published 6:30 AM EDT, Tue May 21, 2024 ","Red Lobster’s bankruptcy report included a blow-by-blow account of its path toward financial ruin, and it was as juicy as a fresh crab leg dipped in butter and washed down with a crisp Chardonnay. ICYMI: Red Lobster on Monday began its widely anticipated bankruptcy process, hoping to offload debt and raise cash to keep the business from foundering, my colleague Nathaniel Meyersohn writes. Most likely, that means you can still get your cheddar biscuit and bottomless shrimp fix, though it closed nearly 100 restaurants last week and many more locations will shut down in the coming months. What went wrong for Red Lobster, the chain that effectively introduced the concept of affordable seafood and kitschy coastal aesthetic to landlubbers across the Midwest and beyond? First, Red Lobster got screwed by private equity. Then, it got screwed by its own managers. Back in 2014, the Darden restaurant group spun off Red Lobster to a private equity firm. To finance the deal, that PE firm sold off most of Red Lobster’s property assets and then leased them back to the restaurants. But, as we learned in the bankruptcy filing, the vast majority of those restaurants were being charged rent at above market rates. That cash drain might have been manageable under normal circumstances. But then 2020 came. Red Lobster was hit with “financial and operational challenges” — namely, the one-two punch of the pandemic and the price inflation it set off, followed by the bone-headed strategic blunders that left the restaurant with $1 billion in debt and less than $30 million in cash on hand. Management wasn’t doing the chain any favors, either, as Red Lobster’s new CEO/bankruptcy shaman Jonathan Tibus notes in the Chapter 11 filing. Specifically, Tibus takes aim at his predecessor Paul Kenny and Thai Union, the Bangkok-based seafood supplier that took a majority stake in Red Lobster in 2020. Thai Union hand-picked Kenny to lead Red Lobster two years ago. Thai Union, under Kenny’s direction, elbowed out other shrimp suppliers, “leaving Thai Union with an exclusive deal that led to higher costs to Red Lobster,” according to the filing. And if you’re the exclusive provider of shrimp to America’s biggest seafood chain, what’d be better than making that limited-time all-you-can-eat shrimp deal a permanent menu item? Ultimately, it was Kenny who pushed through the decision to turn Red Lobster’s “Ultimate Endless Shrimp” promotion into a permanent $20 menu item “despite significant pushback from other members of the company’s management team,” according to the filing. CNN has reached out to Kenny for comment. Thai Union didn’t respond to requests for comment. The all-you-can-eat shrimp deal alone didn’t doom Red Lobster, but boy did it do some damage at a time when the chain was already buckling. The promotion had historically been a limited time thing, and it was a huge hit. Twenty bucks, for all the shrimp? Sign me up! Of course, that’s how every other crustacean-consuming American responded. Because in this country, “all you can eat” is as much a dare as it is a deal. And the lingering hangover of inflation left everyone hungry for a $20 meal that could conceivably provide a week’s worth of sustenance in a single sitting. It cost Red Lobster $11 million in a single quarter. Kenny and Co. not only underestimated how much we could eat, but how long we would take to do it. Once the Endless Shrimp order was placed, folks lingered at their tables to maximize their ROI. Wait times got longer, frustrating staff and customers alike. What happened to the Red Lobster of the ’80s and ‘90s? Like so many beloved brands, it got caught in the net of private equity before being reeled in and gutted.",CNN,21/05/2024,"['Red Lobster’s bankruptcy report included a blow-by-blow account of its path toward financial ruin, and it was as juicy as a fresh crab leg dipped in butter and washed down with a crisp Chardonnay.', 'ICYMI: Red Lobster on Monday began its widely anticipated bankruptcy process, hoping to offload debt and raise cash to keep the business from foundering, my colleague Nathaniel Meyersohn writes.', 'Most likely, that means you can still get your cheddar biscuit and bottomless shrimp fix, though it closed nearly 100 restaurants last week and many more locations will shut down in the coming months.', 'What went wrong for Red Lobster, the chain that effectively introduced the concept of affordable seafood and kitschy coastal aesthetic to landlubbers across the Midwest and beyond?', 'First, Red Lobster got screwed by private equity.', 'Then, it got screwed by its own managers.', 'Back in 2014, the Darden restaurant group spun off Red Lobster to a private equity firm.', 'To finance the deal, that PE firm sold off most of Red Lobster’s property assets and then leased them back to the restaurants.', 'But, as we learned in the bankruptcy filing, the vast majority of those restaurants were being charged rent at above market rates.', 'That cash drain might have been manageable under normal circumstances.', 'But then 2020 came.', 'Red Lobster was hit with “financial and operational challenges” — namely, the one-two punch of the pandemic and the price inflation it set off, followed by the bone-headed strategic blunders that left the restaurant with $1 billion in debt and less than $30 million in cash on hand.', 'Management wasn’t doing the chain any favors, either, as Red Lobster’s new CEO/bankruptcy shaman Jonathan Tibus notes in the Chapter 11 filing.', 'Specifically, Tibus takes aim at his predecessor Paul Kenny and Thai Union, the Bangkok-based seafood supplier that took a majority stake in Red Lobster in 2020.', 'Thai Union hand-picked Kenny to lead Red Lobster two years ago.', 'Thai Union, under Kenny’s direction, elbowed out other shrimp suppliers, “leaving Thai Union with an exclusive deal that led to higher costs to Red Lobster,” according to the filing.', 'And if you’re the exclusive provider of shrimp to America’s biggest seafood chain, what’d be better than making that limited-time all-you-can-eat shrimp deal a permanent menu item?', 'Ultimately, it was Kenny who pushed through the decision to turn Red Lobster’s “Ultimate Endless Shrimp” promotion into a permanent $20 menu item “despite significant pushback from other members of the company’s management team,” according to the filing.', 'CNN has reached out to Kenny for comment.', 'Thai Union didn’t respond to requests for comment.', 'The all-you-can-eat shrimp deal alone didn’t doom Red Lobster, but boy did it do some damage at a time when the chain was already buckling.', 'The promotion had historically been a limited time thing, and it was a huge hit.', 'Twenty bucks, for all the shrimp?', 'Sign me up!', 'Of course, that’s how every other crustacean-consuming American responded.', 'Because in this country, “all you can eat” is as much a dare as it is a deal.', 'And the lingering hangover of inflation left everyone hungry for a $20 meal that could conceivably provide a week’s worth of sustenance in a single sitting.', 'It cost Red Lobster $11 million in a single quarter.', 'Kenny and Co. not only underestimated how much we could eat, but how long we would take to do it.', 'Once the Endless Shrimp order was placed, folks lingered at their tables to maximize their ROI.', 'Wait times got longer, frustrating staff and customers alike.', 'What happened to the Red Lobster of the ’80s and ‘90s?', 'Like so many beloved brands, it got caught in the net of private equity before being reeled in and gutted.']",-0.0017207529495682,"Like so many beloved brands, it got caught in the net of private equity before being reeled in and gutted.","The all-you-can-eat shrimp deal alone didn’t doom Red Lobster, but boy did it do some damage at a time when the chain was already buckling.",-0.2023102819919586,"The promotion had historically been a limited time thing, and it was a huge hit.","Red Lobster was hit with “financial and operational challenges” — namely, the one-two punch of the pandemic and the price inflation it set off, followed by the bone-headed strategic blunders that left the restaurant with $1 billion in debt and less than $30 million in cash on hand.",2024-05-21 Digital humans: the relatable face of artificial intelligence?,https://edition.cnn.com/business/digital-humans-ai-dj-dex-spc/index.html," Published 5:33 AM EDT, Tue March 19, 2024 ","Scrolling through the Instagram account of DJ and aspiring model Dex you’ll see her wearing new outfits, performing at shows around the world and chatting to her thousands of followers about her hobbies. However, it’s clear that there is something different about Dex; she’s an entirely virtual “digital human,” designed by a startup in the UK. For her performances, Dex is displayed on a video screen or as a holographic projection, with her mixes created by humans. She is animated using Unreal Engine — a 3D modeling software widely used in video games — combined with motion-capture. Generative artificial intelligence allows her to remember information and respond to questions, using a voice also generated by AI. “She’s probably one of the only digital humans in the performance space that you can have a conversation and interact with,” says Denise Harris, CCO of startup Sum Vivas. “You can ask her anything. She is a genius about music.” Last month, Dex performed at Digital Fashion Weeks in New York, Paris and Milan, and she has modeled outfits by Prada and Louis Vuitton at digital fashion events. For Liverpool-based Sum Vivas she’s a “showpiece” for more practical applications. The company is now developing digital humans that can “listen” to people’s questions and converse in real time. “Shellie” can provide product information as an avatar on company websites, while “Arif” is set to direct passengers and answer questions as a multilingual concierge on screens at airports. According to CEO and founder Rob Sims, digital humans can help bridge the gap between AI technology and people. “What we’ve found is when people start working with and conversing with a digital human, they very quickly suspend disbelief,” Sims tells CNN. “It becomes natural.” Since OpenAI’s ChatGPT was launched in November 2022, considerable hype has surrounded the potential of generative AI — artificial intelligence powered by huge datasets of information, capable of generating text outputs in a conversational way. Record levels of investment into generative AI have followed, with over $21 billion poured into the industry during the first nine months of last year, according to data insights company Pitchbook. In March 2023, Google launched Bard (recently renamed Gemini) and around the same time Anthropic released its AI assistant Claude. As generative AI chatbots become increasingly ubiquitous, Sum Vivas is one of several companies looking to make them more human. US and New Zealand-based UneeQ has developed animated conversational “digital humans” that can be used as virtual sales reps and customer service agents on company websites, and this month it debuted Sama 2.0, an animated cabin crew member that answers questions on Qatar Airways’ website and app. Microsoft recently announced that users of its Azure software would be able to create lifelike avatars capable of turning text prompts into animated speech. However, there are widespread concerns about the impact AI could have on the job market. “When we rely on automated tools, what skills are we losing in the process?” asks Jennifer Ding, senior researcher at the Alan Turing Institute, the UK’s national institute for data science and artificial intelligence. “In some ways, we think of AI as something that’s helping us or augmenting our work,” she says. “However, alongside, this fear of replacement is bubbling up more and more.” Harris, however, points to new opportunities within digital human design and development. “Every scenario that we found, we’re creating jobs and working in harmony with people rather than taking away jobs,” she says. “Digital humans, first and foremost, should work with other human colleagues,” adds Sims. “We’ll move into a stage where digital humans will start to become just another member of the team, with added benefits for that team, and obviously the customers they serve.”",CNN,19/03/2024,"['Scrolling through the Instagram account of DJ and aspiring model Dex you’ll see her wearing new outfits, performing at shows around the world and chatting to her thousands of followers about her hobbies.', 'However, it’s clear that there is something different about Dex; she’s an entirely virtual “digital human,” designed by a startup in the UK.', 'For her performances, Dex is displayed on a video screen or as a holographic projection, with her mixes created by humans.', 'She is animated using Unreal Engine — a 3D modeling software widely used in video games — combined with motion-capture.', 'Generative artificial intelligence allows her to remember information and respond to questions, using a voice also generated by AI.', '“She’s probably one of the only digital humans in the performance space that you can have a conversation and interact with,” says Denise Harris, CCO of startup Sum Vivas. “', 'You can ask her anything.', 'She is a genius about music.”', 'Last month, Dex performed at Digital Fashion Weeks in New York, Paris and Milan, and she has modeled outfits by Prada and Louis Vuitton at digital fashion events.', 'For Liverpool-based Sum Vivas she’s a “showpiece” for more practical applications.', 'The company is now developing digital humans that can “listen” to people’s questions and converse in real time. “', 'Shellie” can provide product information as an avatar on company websites, while “Arif” is set to direct passengers and answer questions as a multilingual concierge on screens at airports.', 'According to CEO and founder Rob Sims, digital humans can help bridge the gap between AI technology and people. “', 'What we’ve found is when people start working with and conversing with a digital human, they very quickly suspend disbelief,” Sims tells CNN. “', 'It becomes natural.”', 'Since OpenAI’s ChatGPT was launched in November 2022, considerable hype has surrounded the potential of generative AI — artificial intelligence powered by huge datasets of information, capable of generating text outputs in a conversational way.', 'Record levels of investment into generative AI have followed, with over $21 billion poured into the industry during the first nine months of last year, according to data insights company Pitchbook.', 'In March 2023, Google launched Bard (recently renamed Gemini) and around the same time Anthropic released its AI assistant Claude.', 'As generative AI chatbots become increasingly ubiquitous, Sum Vivas is one of several companies looking to make them more human.', 'US and New Zealand-based UneeQ has developed animated conversational “digital humans” that can be used as virtual sales reps and customer service agents on company websites, and this month it debuted Sama 2.0, an animated cabin crew member that answers questions on Qatar Airways’ website and app.', 'Microsoft recently announced that users of its Azure software would be able to create lifelike avatars capable of turning text prompts into animated speech.', 'However, there are widespread concerns about the impact AI could have on the job market.', '“When we rely on automated tools, what skills are we losing in the process?”', 'asks Jennifer Ding, senior researcher at the Alan Turing Institute, the UK’s national institute for data science and artificial intelligence. “', 'In some ways, we think of AI as something that’s helping us or augmenting our work,” she says. “', 'However, alongside, this fear of replacement is bubbling up more and more.”', 'Harris, however, points to new opportunities within digital human design and development. “', 'Every scenario that we found, we’re creating jobs and working in harmony with people rather than taking away jobs,” she says.', '“Digital humans, first and foremost, should work with other human colleagues,” adds Sims. “', 'We’ll move into a stage where digital humans will start to become just another member of the team, with added benefits for that team, and obviously the customers they serve.”']",0.1214444180579973,"Since OpenAI’s ChatGPT was launched in November 2022, considerable hype has surrounded the potential of generative AI — artificial intelligence powered by huge datasets of information, capable of generating text outputs in a conversational way.","However, alongside, this fear of replacement is bubbling up more and more.”",0.2107271328568458,"Harris, however, points to new opportunities within digital human design and development. “","However, there are widespread concerns about the impact AI could have on the job market.",2024-05-21 Walmart’s business surges as shoppers hunt for low prices,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/16/investing/walmart-sales-inflation/index.html," Updated 1:52 PM EDT, Thu May 16, 2024 ","Businesses from McDonald’s to Home Depot are struggling to attract financially strapped shoppers. But Walmart is growing as consumers search for inexpensive groceries, essentials and other merchandise. Walmart said Thursday that sales at stores open at least a year increased 3.8% during its latest quarter from the same time last year. The company raised its sales and profit guidance for the year, a sign it expects growth to continue. The largest retailer in the United States has used its size and buying power to keep prices lower than competitors even as inflation has surged since the pandemic, retail analysts say. Groceries account for more than half of Walmart’s sales, and Walmart has benefited from its pricing advantage with prices around 25% lower than traditional supermarkets, according to analysts at Evercore IRI. While low and middle-income shoppers have traditionally formed the core of Walmart’s customer base, Walmart also has grown with people making more than $100,000 a year, saying that its gains last quarter were “primarily driven by upper-income households.” Walmart is also making gains online. Its digital sales, which include in-store pickup and delivery, grew 22% last quarter. “Most Americans remain uncomfortable with food prices and are still actively looking for ways to keep their spending in check,” Neil Saunders, an analyst at GlobalData Retail, said in a note to clients Thursday. This has worked in “Walmart’s favor and has allowed the chain to continue to acquire new customers.” Walmart’s stock jumped 7% during afternoon trading Thursday. Meanwhile, department stores, home improvement retailers and other retail segments have taken a hit as stretched shoppers pull back. Fast food chains have also struggled. Retail sales have slipped overall in recent months. Home Depot’s sales at stores open for at least one year fell 2.8% last quarter, the company said this week, and some lower-income Americans are rejecting McDonald’s, opting to cook at home instead, according to McDonald’s. “It’s a challenging consumer environment,” said Ian Borden, McDonald’s CFO, noting that many consumers are trying to manage inflation, higher interest rates and dwindling savings.",CNN,16/05/2024,"['Businesses from McDonald’s to Home Depot are struggling to attract financially strapped shoppers.', 'But Walmart is growing as consumers search for inexpensive groceries, essentials and other merchandise.', 'Walmart said Thursday that sales at stores open at least a year increased 3.8% during its latest quarter from the same time last year.', 'The company raised its sales and profit guidance for the year, a sign it expects growth to continue.', 'The largest retailer in the United States has used its size and buying power to keep prices lower than competitors even as inflation has surged since the pandemic, retail analysts say.', 'Groceries account for more than half of Walmart’s sales, and Walmart has benefited from its pricing advantage with prices around 25% lower than traditional supermarkets, according to analysts at Evercore IRI.', 'While low and middle-income shoppers have traditionally formed the core of Walmart’s customer base, Walmart also has grown with people making more than $100,000 a year, saying that its gains last quarter were “primarily driven by upper-income households.”', 'Walmart is also making gains online.', 'Its digital sales, which include in-store pickup and delivery, grew 22% last quarter.', '“Most Americans remain uncomfortable with food prices and are still actively looking for ways to keep their spending in check,” Neil Saunders, an analyst at GlobalData Retail, said in a note to clients Thursday.', 'This has worked in “Walmart’s favor and has allowed the chain to continue to acquire new customers.”', 'Walmart’s stock jumped 7% during afternoon trading Thursday.', 'Meanwhile, department stores, home improvement retailers and other retail segments have taken a hit as stretched shoppers pull back.', 'Fast food chains have also struggled.', 'Retail sales have slipped overall in recent months.', 'Home Depot’s sales at stores open for at least one year fell 2.8% last quarter, the company said this week, and some lower-income Americans are rejectingMcDonald’s, opting to cook at home instead, according to McDonald’s.', '“It’s a challenging consumer environment,” said Ian Borden, McDonald’s CFO, noting that many consumers are trying to manage inflation, higher interest rates and dwindling savings.']",0.1344126404167387,"The company raised its sales and profit guidance for the year, a sign it expects growth to continue.",Fast food chains have also struggled.,0.1932645440101623,"While low and middle-income shoppers have traditionally formed the core of Walmart’s customer base, Walmart also has grown with people making more than $100,000 a year, saying that its gains last quarter were “primarily driven by upper-income households.”","Home Depot’s sales at stores open for at least one year fell 2.8% last quarter, the company said this week, and some lower-income Americans are rejectingMcDonald’s, opting to cook at home instead, according to McDonald’s.",2024-05-21 FTC investigating TikTok over privacy and security,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/tech/ftc-tiktok-probe-privacy-and-security/index.html," Updated 8:11 PM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","The Federal Trade Commission is investigating TikTok for its data and security practices, two sources told CNN on the condition of anonymity. The probe is yet another complication for the social media platform, which is already facing the threat of a potential US ban or a forced divestment from its Chinese parent company. The sources said that the FTC is probing TikTok over an alleged violation of the Children’s Online Privacy Protection rule, which requires companies to notify parents and obtain consent before collecting data from children under 13. The agency is also investigating whether TikTok violated a portion of the FTC Act that prohibits “unfair or deceptive” business practices, the sources said, in denying that TikTok user data could be accessed by individuals in China. The FTC could bring a suit against TikTok or settle with the company in the coming weeks, according to one of the sources. Politico reported news of the probe earlier. When asked about the investigation, FTC Director of Public Affairs Douglas Farrar replied: “No comment.” TikTok did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The FTC probe comes as TikTok faces an existential threat in the US. Earlier this month, a bipartisan group in the US House of Representatives voted to pass a law forcing TikTok to be sold by ByteDance or face a ban from US app stores. The bill is now before the Senate, and President Joe Biden has said he would sign it if it gets to his desk. Senate leaders, however, have indicated they are taking a deliberate approach — which could lead to delays or even potentially doom the House bill. The short-form video company, owned by Chinese firm ByteDance, has denied assertions that its app poses a national security threat to US citizens. TikTok, which does not operate in China, has said that the Chinese government has never accessed US user data. Cybersecurity experts say Chinese laws require ByteDance to cooperate with that country’s intelligence demands — a fact that, given ByteDance’s ownership of TikTok, could hypothetically put US user data at risk. To address that issue, TikTok has taken steps to store its US user data on cloud servers controlled by US tech giant Oracle and established internal protocols limiting access by non-US employees. TikTok acknowledged to Congress in 2022 that employees based in China could access US user data, following a report that year by BuzzFeed News that ByteDance employees had accessed that information on multiple occasions. TikTok CEO Shou Chew, in his first appearance before Congress last year, also acknowledged that several ByteDance employees were fired for spying on certain US journalists as part of a “misguided attempt” to hunt down leakers within the company.",CNN,26/03/2024,"['The Federal Trade Commission is investigating TikTok for its data and security practices, two sources told CNN on the condition of anonymity.', 'The probe is yet another complication for the social media platform, which is already facing the threat of a potential US ban or a forced divestment from its Chinese parent company.', 'The sources said that the FTC is probing TikTok over an alleged violation of the Children’s Online Privacy Protection rule, which requires companies to notify parents and obtain consent before collecting data from children under 13.', 'The agency is also investigating whether TikTok violated a portion of the FTC Act that prohibits “unfair or deceptive” business practices, the sources said, in denying that TikTok user data could be accessed by individuals in China.', 'The FTC could bring a suit against TikTok or settle with the company in the coming weeks, according to one of the sources.', 'Politico reported news of the probe earlier.', 'When asked about the investigation, FTC Director of Public Affairs Douglas Farrar replied: “No comment.”', 'TikTok did not immediately respond to a request for comment.', 'The FTC probe comes as TikTok faces an existential threat in the US.', 'Earlier this month, a bipartisan group in the US House of Representatives voted to pass a law forcing TikTok to be sold by ByteDance or face a ban from US app stores.', 'The bill is now before the Senate, and President Joe Biden has said he would sign it if it gets to his desk.', 'Senate leaders, however, have indicated they are taking a deliberate approach —which could lead to delays or even potentially doom the House bill.', 'The short-form video company, owned by Chinese firm ByteDance, has denied assertions that its app poses a national security threat to US citizens.', 'TikTok, which does not operate in China, has said that the Chinese government has never accessed US user data.', 'Cybersecurity experts say Chinese laws require ByteDance to cooperate with that country’s intelligence demands—a fact that, given ByteDance’s ownership of TikTok, could hypothetically put US user data at risk.', 'To address that issue, TikTok has taken steps to store its US user data on cloud servers controlled by US tech giant Oracle and established internal protocols limiting access by non-US employees.', 'TikTok acknowledged to Congress in 2022 that employees based in China could access US user data, following a report that year by BuzzFeed News that ByteDance employees had accessed that information on multiple occasions.', 'TikTok CEO Shou Chew, in his first appearance before Congress last year, also acknowledged that several ByteDance employees were fired for spying on certain US journalists as part of a “misguided attempt” to hunt down leakers within the company.']",-0.232320081688102,"The Federal Trade Commission is investigating TikTok for its data and security practices, two sources told CNN on the condition of anonymity.","The probe is yet another complication for the social media platform, which is already facing the threat of a potential US ban or a forced divestment from its Chinese parent company.",-0.8880722284317016,,"Senate leaders, however, have indicated they are taking a deliberate approach —which could lead to delays or even potentially doom the House bill.",2024-05-21 Boeing boss's $33m pay package approved,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c72pv86n5r3o,2024-05-17T17:16:00.578Z,"Boeing shareholders have signed off on the plane-maker's plan to grant outgoing boss Dave Calhoun a 2023 pay package worth nearly $33m (£25m). A majority voted in favour of the plan, which had drawn criticism as the company grapples with a crisis sparked by the mid-air blowout of a panel on one of its planes in January. Such pay votes, held at the company's annual meetings, are not binding. A breakdown of the vote was not immediately available. Ahead of the meeting, at least one prominent shareholder advisory group had criticised the plan and it also drew attention from some investors who spoke at the event. The firm's decision to keep outgoing boss Dave Calhoun on the company's board of directors had raised questions as well, but was also approved. Mr Calhoun's compensation package included salary of $1.4m (£1.1m) and stock awards worth about $30m (£23m) when granted. That compared to a package of roughly $22.6m (£17m) in 2022. In a question-and answer session after the vote, the firm was asked how the compensation for Mr Calhoun and others were ""justified"" given the severe challenges now facing the company. New board chairman Steve Mollenkopf said the board had reduced some 2024 awards for executives after the accident and moved swiftly to overhaul the design of its pay incentives. That included giving product safety the primary weight in determining performance, instead of financial factors - such as cash flow and share price - as had been the case previously, he said. But both he and Mr Calhoun acknowledged the strains facing the company, some of which Mr Calhoun described as ""potentially existential"" in nature. The Alaska Airlines incident revived questions about the firm's manufacturing and safety procedures and has spawned numerous investigations and lawsuits. Just days ago, the US Department of Justice (DOJ) said it was considering whether to prosecute Boeing over deadly crashes involving its 737 Max aircraft in 2018 and 2019, after determining it had breached a deal that shielded it from criminal charges. In March, Boeing said Mr Calhoun would step down by the end of the year. The search for his replacement is a key focus of the company now, Mr Mollenkopf said. ""The months and years ahead are critically important for our company as we take the necessary steps to regain the trust lost in recent times,"" he said. In putting the pay package to shareholders earlier this year, the company praised how Mr Calhoun had steered the company through challenges such as Covid since 2020. It said he had responded to the Alaska Airlines blowout ""in the right way"". ""The 737 MAX accidents and COVID have combined to create tremendous stress on the Company’s manufacturing operations and supply chain,"" it said. ""However, the Board believes that Mr. Calhoun’s primary focus on safety, quality and transparency is exactly what Boeing has needed, and continues to need."" ",BBC,17/05/2024,"[""Boeing shareholders have signed off on the plane-maker's plan to grant outgoing boss Dave Calhoun a 2023 pay package worth nearly $33m (£25m)."", 'A majority voted in favour of the plan, which had drawn criticism as the company grapples with a crisis sparked by the mid-air blowout of a panel on one of its planes in January.', ""Such pay votes, held at the company's annual meetings, are not binding."", 'A breakdown of the vote was not immediately available.', 'Ahead of the meeting, at least one prominent shareholder advisory group had criticised the plan and it also drew attention from some investors who spoke at the event.', ""The firm's decision to keep outgoing boss Dave Calhoun on the company's board of directors had raised questions as well, but was also approved."", ""Mr Calhoun's compensation package included salary of $1.4m (£1.1m) and stock awards worth about $30m (£23m) when granted."", 'That compared to a package of roughly $22.6m (£17m) in 2022.', 'In a question-and answer session after the vote, the firm was asked how the compensation for Mr Calhoun and others were ""justified"" given the severe challenges now facing the company.', 'New board chairman Steve Mollenkopf said the board had reduced some 2024 awards for executives after the accident and moved swiftly to overhaul the design of its pay incentives.', 'That included giving product safety the primary weight in determining performance, instead of financial factors - such as cash flow and share price - as had been the case previously, he said.', 'But both he and Mr Calhoun acknowledged the strains facing the company, some of which Mr Calhoun described as ""potentially existential"" in nature.', ""The Alaska Airlines incident revived questions about the firm's manufacturing and safety procedures and has spawned numerous investigations and lawsuits."", 'Just days ago, the US Department of Justice (DOJ) said it was considering whether to prosecute Boeing over deadly crashes involving its 737 Max aircraft in 2018 and 2019, after determining it had breached a deal that shielded it from criminal charges.', 'In March, Boeing said Mr Calhoun would step down by the end of the year.', 'The search for his replacement is a key focus of the company now, Mr Mollenkopf said. ""', 'The months and years ahead are critically important for our company as we take the necessary steps to regain the trust lost in recent times,"" he said.', 'In putting the pay package to shareholders earlier this year, the company praised how Mr Calhoun had steered the company through challenges such as Covid since 2020.', 'It said he had responded to the Alaska Airlines blowout ""in the right way"". ""', 'The 737 MAX accidents and COVID have combined to create tremendous stress on the Company’s manufacturing operations and supply chain,"" it said. ""', 'However, the Board believes that Mr. Calhoun’s primary focus on safety, quality and transparency is exactly what Boeing has needed, and continues to need.""']",0.1241324687216989,"That included giving product safety the primary weight in determining performance, instead of financial factors - such as cash flow and share price - as had been the case previously, he said.","A majority voted in favour of the plan, which had drawn criticism as the company grapples with a crisis sparked by the mid-air blowout of a panel on one of its planes in January.",0.0022622227668762,Boeing shareholders have signed off on the plane-maker's plan to grant outgoing boss Dave Calhoun a 2023 pay package worth nearly $33m (£25m).,"The 737 MAX accidents and COVID have combined to create tremendous stress on the Company’s manufacturing operations and supply chain,"" it said. """,2024-05-21 Elvis’ granddaughter fights Graceland foreclosure sale and alleges fraud,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/business/graceland-elvis-granddaughter-fights-foreclosure-sale/index.html," Updated 5:58 AM EDT, Tue May 21, 2024 ","Elvis Presley’s granddaughter is suing to stop a foreclosure sale of the late singer’s historic Memphis home, Graceland, scheduled this week, alleging fraud and saying the purported company behind the sale doesn’t exist and has no rights to the property. Danielle Riley Keough, the granddaughter of Elvis and the current owner of the property, was able to get a restraining order against any sale before a court rules on her application for an injunction, according to court documents obtained by CNN. Keough filed a lawsuit this month stating that last year, “Naussany Investments & Private Lending LLC presented documents purporting to show that Lisa Marie Presley had borrowed $3.8 million from Naussany Investments and gave a deed of trust encumbering Graceland as security.” Lisa Marie Presley, Elvis’ daughter and Keough’s mother, died in January 2023. Lisa Marie Presley was the sole heir to Graceland and her father’s estate when he died in 1977, and its overall worth has now reportedly reached into the hundreds of millions of dollars. “These documents are fraudulent,” Keough’s lawsuit alleges. “Lisa Marie Presley never borrowed money from Naussany Investments and never gave a deed of trust to Naussany Investments.” The court document also identified a notary in Florida who said she “never met Lisa Marie Presley nor notarized any document for her,” despite her name being on loan paperwork. The lawsuit alleges Naussany Investments & Private Lending LLC “appears to be a false entity created for the purpose of defrauding.” CNN emailed Naussany Investments & Private Lending LLC and received an automated reply, “We are currently out of the office; we will resume normal business hours on Tuesday May 28, 2024.” When CNN attempted to reach Naussany Investments & Private Lending LLC by phone, the number was no longer in service. The business was listed in a court document from Keough’s attorney as being located in Kimberling City, Missouri, but CNN was unable to locate a business in the state of Missouri by that name via the secretary of state’s office. CNN was also unable to locate a business by that name when searching nationwide. “Naussany Investments has now scheduled a non-judicial sale of Graceland based on the fraudulent deed of trust,” the lawsuit reads. “The sale is scheduled for May 23, 2024. This is an action to enjoin the non-judicial sale.” According to court documents obtained by CNN, a temporary restraining order was granted on May 15 prohibiting Naussany Investments & Private Lending LLC from conducting “any non-judicial sale” of the property. CNN has sought comment from representatives and attorneys for Keough. In a statement, Elvis Presley Enterprises, the company that manages Presley’s estate, concurred that Naussany’s claim was illegitimate. “Elvis Presley Enterprises can confirm that these claims are fraudulent,” the company said. “There is no foreclosure sale. Simply put, the counter lawsuit has been filed is to stop the fraud.” Graceland is one of the South’s biggest tourist draws and for years was the nation’s second-most visited home after the White House. In 2020, a Presley executive told Rolling Stone that Presley’s estate was worth between $400 million and $500 million. Lisa Marie Presley annually earned seven figures from it, based on a court filing in her 2022 divorce. A hearing is scheduled for Wednesday at 9 a.m. at Chancery Court in Shelby County, Tennessee. CNN’s Joe Sutton, Luciana Lopez and Alli Rosenbloom contributed to this report.",CNN,21/05/2024,"['Elvis Presley’s granddaughter is suing to stop a foreclosure sale of the late singer’s historic Memphis home, Graceland, scheduled this week, alleging fraud and saying the purported company behind the sale doesn’t exist and has no rights to the property.', 'Danielle Riley Keough, the granddaughter of Elvis and the current owner of the property, was able to get a restraining order against any sale before a court rules on her application for an injunction, according to court documents obtained by CNN.', 'Keough filed a lawsuit this monthstating that last year, “Naussany Investments & Private Lending LLC presented documents purporting to show that Lisa Marie Presley had borrowed $3.8 million from Naussany Investments and gave a deed of trust encumbering Graceland as security.”', 'Lisa Marie Presley, Elvis’daughter and Keough’s mother, died in January 2023.', 'Lisa Marie Presley was the sole heir to Graceland and her father’s estate when he died in 1977, and its overall worth has now reportedly reached into the hundreds of millions of dollars.', '“These documents are fraudulent,” Keough’s lawsuit alleges. “', 'Lisa Marie Presley never borrowed money from Naussany Investments and never gave a deed of trust to Naussany Investments.”', 'The court document also identified a notary in Florida who said she “never met Lisa Marie Presley nor notarized any document for her,” despite her name being on loan paperwork.', 'The lawsuit alleges Naussany Investments & Private Lending LLC “appears to be a false entity created for the purpose of defrauding.”', 'CNN emailed Naussany Investments & Private Lending LLC and received an automated reply, “We are currently out of the office; we will resume normal business hours on Tuesday May 28, 2024.”', 'When CNN attempted to reach Naussany Investments & Private Lending LLC by phone, the number was no longer in service.', 'The business was listed in a court document from Keough’s attorney as being located in Kimberling City, Missouri, but CNN was unable to locate a business in the state of Missouri by that name via the secretary of state’s office.', 'CNN was also unable to locate a business by that name when searching nationwide.', '“Naussany Investments has now scheduled a non-judicial sale of Graceland based on the fraudulent deed of trust,” the lawsuit reads. “', 'The sale is scheduled for May 23, 2024.This is an action to enjoin the non-judicial sale.”', 'According to court documents obtained by CNN, a temporary restraining order was grantedon May 15prohibiting Naussany Investments & Private Lending LLC from conducting “any non-judicial sale” of the property.', 'CNN has sought comment from representatives and attorneys for Keough.', 'In a statement, Elvis Presley Enterprises, the company that manages Presley’s estate, concurred that Naussany’s claim was illegitimate.', '“Elvis Presley Enterprises can confirm that these claims are fraudulent,” the company said. “', 'There is no foreclosure sale.', 'Simply put, the counter lawsuit has been filed is to stop the fraud.”', 'Graceland is one of the South’s biggest tourist draws and foryearswas the nation’s second-most visited homeafter the White House.', 'In 2020, a Presley executivetold Rolling Stonethat Presley’s estate was worth between $400 million and $500 million.', 'Lisa Marie Presley annually earned seven figures from it, based on a court filing in her 2022 divorce.', 'A hearing is scheduled for Wednesday at 9 a.m. at Chancery Court in Shelby County, Tennessee.', 'CNN’s Joe Sutton, Luciana Lopez andAlli Rosenbloom contributed to this report.']",-0.1194504962647776,"Keough filed a lawsuit this monthstating that last year, “Naussany Investments & Private Lending LLC presented documents purporting to show that Lisa Marie Presley had borrowed $3.8 million from Naussany Investments and gave a deed of trust encumbering Graceland as security.”","Elvis Presley’s granddaughter is suing to stop a foreclosure sale of the late singer’s historic Memphis home, Graceland, scheduled this week, alleging fraud and saying the purported company behind the sale doesn’t exist and has no rights to the property.",0.9991542100906372,"Danielle Riley Keough, the granddaughter of Elvis and the current owner of the property, was able to get a restraining order against any sale before a court rules on her application for an injunction, according to court documents obtained by CNN.",,2024-05-21 Water firms ask for bill rises of between 24% and 91%,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ce55vp78n40o,2024-05-21T13:33:01.036Z,"Water companies in England and Wales want bills to increase by between 24% and 91% over the next five years, according to figures compiled by the consumer watchdog. Southern Water is asking for the biggest jump of 91%, according to the Consumer Council for Water (CCW), with South Staffordshire and Cambridge Water asking for the lowest rise of 24%. Water firms say the increases will fund £100bn of spending over the period, which will include replacing ageing, leaking pipes and reducing sewage discharges into rivers and seas. The latest bill hike demands come ahead of a crucial meeting this week when the industry regulator Ofwat will decide what companies can charge between 2025 and 2030. Water companies have been heavily criticised for widespread leaks and the amount of sewage being discharged, which critics have blamed on under-investment in the country's infrastructure. Fewer than one in six customers considered water bill rises affordable, according to a survey Ofwat required the companies to conduct of their own customers. The regulator is unlikely to approve the bill rises in full, but the BBC understands it is expected to agree to bill rises of at least half the amount the companies are requesting, and in some cases considerably more than half. Mike Keil, chief executive of the CCW, said bill rises were ""going to come as a massive surprise to people"". ""People do want to see improvements, they do understand that takes investment, but I think the scale of what’s being proposed here is going to come as a real shock and this is why water companies have double down on their efforts to explain what people are getting for their money,"" he said. Source: Consumer Council for Water Estimate are for average bills. Costs will vary depending on a property's rateable value The latest figures from the CCW incorporate changes from the companies, the regulator Ofwat and other bodies including the Environment Agency since their five year plans for the period 2025-2030 were first submitted last October. The proposed increases include a forecasted inflation rate of 2%, which is in line with the Bank of England's target. There is a very wide range of proposed bill rises, which reflects the very different challenges facing companies in different parts of England and Wales. The very high figure at Southern reflects major upgrades to water infrastructure that has had serious problems. Katy Taylor, Southern Water’s chief customer officer, said the company shared ""everyone’s concerns about rising payments"", but added ""the water needs of our water-stressed region pose a unique set of challenges which require significant investment"". She said the cash from higher bills would be used to ""reduce the use of storm overflows, safeguard water supplies for a rapidly growing population, and protect the environment"". Southern Water is owned by Australian firm Macquarie which has faced fierce criticism for the period when it was Thames Water’s biggest shareholder. In five of the 10 years it owned Thames, the company paid out more in dividends than it made in profits, while debt rose from £2.5bn to over £10bn in the same period. Macquarie points out that it has recently injected £500m of additional cash into Southern Water. Water UK, which represents suppliers, said bill rises were ""never welcome"" and added that water companies were ""massively increasing the level of financial support they offer to customers who struggle to pay their bills"". ""Ofwat is currently scrutinising these plans and will only allow investment that is new, necessary and value for money. It will not allow water companies to spend money on anything for which they have already received funding,"" the industry body said. Ofwat will publish a preliminary report on the bill rises it expects to approve on 12 June with the figures finalised in December. Water services are publicly owned in Northern Ireland and Scotland. ",BBC,21/05/2024,"['Water companies in England and Wales want bills to increase by between 24% and 91% over the next five years, according to figures compiled by the consumer watchdog.', 'Southern Water is asking for the biggest jump of 91%, according to the Consumer Council for Water (CCW), with South Staffordshire and Cambridge Water asking for the lowest rise of 24%.', 'Water firms say the increases will fund £100bn of spending over the period, which will include replacing ageing, leaking pipes and reducing sewage discharges into rivers and seas.', 'The latest bill hike demands come ahead of a crucial meeting this week when the industry regulator Ofwat will decide what companies can charge between 2025 and 2030.', ""Water companies have been heavily criticised for widespread leaks and the amount of sewage being discharged, which critics have blamed on under-investment in the country's infrastructure."", 'Fewer than one in six customers considered water bill rises affordable, according to a survey Ofwat required the companies to conduct of their own customers.', 'The regulator is unlikely to approve the bill rises in full, but the BBC understands it is expected to agree to bill rises of at least half the amount the companies are requesting, and in some cases considerably more than half.', 'Mike Keil, chief executive of the CCW, said bill rises were ""going to come as a massive surprise to people"". ""', 'People do want to see improvements, they do understand that takes investment, but I think the scale of what’s being proposed here is going to come as a real shock and this is why water companies have double down on their efforts to explain what people are getting for their money,"" he said.', 'Source: Consumer Council for Water Estimate are for average bills.', ""Costs will vary depending on a property's rateable value The latest figures from the CCW incorporate changes from the companies, the regulator Ofwat and other bodies including the Environment Agency since their five year plans for the period 2025-2030 were first submitted last October."", ""The proposed increases include a forecasted inflation rate of 2%, which is in line with the Bank of England's target."", 'There is a very wide range of proposed bill rises, which reflects the very different challenges facing companies in different parts of England and Wales.', 'The very high figure at Southern reflects major upgrades to water infrastructure that has had serious problems.', 'Katy Taylor, Southern Water’s chief customer officer, said the company shared ""everyone’s concerns about rising payments"", but added ""the water needs of our water-stressed region pose a unique set of challenges which require significant investment"".', 'She said the cash from higher bills would be used to ""reduce the use of storm overflows, safeguard water supplies for a rapidly growing population, and protect the environment"".', 'Southern Water is owned by Australian firm Macquarie which has faced fierce criticism for the period when it was Thames Water’s biggest shareholder.', 'In five of the 10 years it owned Thames, the company paid out more in dividends than it made in profits, while debt rose from £2.5bn to over £10bn in the same period.', 'Macquarie points out that it has recently injected £500m of additional cash into Southern Water.', 'Water UK, which represents suppliers, said bill rises were ""never welcome"" and added that water companies were ""massively increasing the level of financial support they offer to customers who struggle to pay their bills"". ""', 'Ofwat is currently scrutinising these plans and will only allow investment that is new, necessary and value for money.', 'It will not allow water companies to spend money on anything for which they have already received funding,"" the industry body said.', 'Ofwat will publish a preliminary report on the bill rises it expects to approve on 12 June with the figures finalised in December.', 'Water services are publicly owned in Northern Ireland and Scotland.']",0.0019415019538821,"She said the cash from higher bills would be used to ""reduce the use of storm overflows, safeguard water supplies for a rapidly growing population, and protect the environment"".","Water companies have been heavily criticised for widespread leaks and the amount of sewage being discharged, which critics have blamed on under-investment in the country's infrastructure.",0.2631514200142452,"In five of the 10 years it owned Thames, the company paid out more in dividends than it made in profits, while debt rose from £2.5bn to over £10bn in the same period.","People do want to see improvements, they do understand that takes investment, but I think the scale of what’s being proposed here is going to come as a real shock and this is why water companies have double down on their efforts to explain what people are getting for their money,"" he said.",2024-05-21 Microsoft stock hits all-time high after hiring former OpenAI CEO Sam Altman,https://edition.cnn.com/2023/11/20/investing/microsoft-stock-record-high-altman-openai/index.html," Updated 4:19 PM EST, Mon November 20, 2023 ","Microsoft stock reached a record high on Monday after the company said that Sam Altman, former chief executive of OpenAI, will join the company to head its artificial intelligence innovation leg. Shares of the tech behemoth rose 2.1% to an all-time high close of $377.44 on Monday, beating the previous record of $376.17. That comes after shares of Microsoft fell 1.7% on Friday, when Sam Altman was ousted from his position at OpenAI in a boardroom coup. Microsoft is the artificial intelligence firm’s biggest stakeholder, with a $13 billion investment in the company. Greg Brockman, who co-founded OpenAI and quit after Altman’s firing, is also joining Microsoft. Altman’s hiring ended days of speculation that the former chief executive could return to the firm after his dramatic firing. Emmett Shear, former CEO of Amazon-owned streaming service Twitch, will replace OpenAI chief technology officer Mira Murati as interim chief executive. Microsoft shares are up about 56% for the year. The stock is one of the “Magnificent Seven” that have powered the lion’s share of the market’s returns this year, boosted by Wall Street’s bet that artificial intelligence is the next big thing in tech. Dan Ives, tech analyst at Wedbush Securities, reiterated his $425 price target for Microsoft’s stock following Altman’s and Brockman’s hires. “We view Microsoft now even in a stronger position from an AI perspective with Altman and Brockman” at the company, Ives wrote in a note on Monday. Other members of the “Magnificent Seven” saw a boost on Monday. Nvidia shares gained 2.3% to end the trading session at $504.20 ahead of its earnings due on Tuesday, notching a record-high close for the chipmaker.",CNN,20/11/2023,"['Microsoft stock reached a record high on Monday after the company said that Sam Altman, former chief executive of OpenAI, will join the company to head its artificial intelligence innovation leg.', 'Shares of the tech behemoth rose 2.1% to an all-time high close of $377.44 on Monday, beating the previous record of $376.17.', 'That comes after shares of Microsoft fell 1.7% on Friday, when Sam Altman was ousted from his position at OpenAI in a boardroom coup.', 'Microsoft is the artificial intelligence firm’s biggest stakeholder, with a $13 billion investment in the company.', 'Greg Brockman, who co-founded OpenAI and quit after Altman’s firing, is also joining Microsoft.', 'Altman’s hiring ended days of speculation that the former chief executive could return to the firm after his dramatic firing.', 'Emmett Shear, former CEO of Amazon-owned streaming service Twitch, will replace OpenAI chief technology officer Mira Murati as interim chief executive.', 'Microsoft shares are up about 56% for the year.', 'The stock is one of the “Magnificent Seven” that have powered the lion’s share of the market’s returns this year, boosted by Wall Street’s bet that artificial intelligence is the next big thing in tech.', 'Dan Ives, tech analyst at Wedbush Securities, reiterated his $425 price target for Microsoft’s stock following Altman’s and Brockman’s hires.', '“We view Microsoft now even in a stronger position from an AI perspective with Altman and Brockman” at the company, Ives wrote in a note on Monday.', 'Other members of the “Magnificent Seven” saw a boost on Monday.', 'Nvidia shares gained 2.3% to end the trading session at $504.20 ahead of its earnings due on Tuesday, notching a record-high close for the chipmaker.']",0.3148943375907157,"The stock is one of the “Magnificent Seven” that have powered the lion’s share of the market’s returns this year, boosted by Wall Street’s bet that artificial intelligence is the next big thing in tech.","Greg Brockman, who co-founded OpenAI and quit after Altman’s firing, is also joining Microsoft.",0.7688216765721639,Microsoft shares are up about 56% for the year.,"That comes after shares of Microsoft fell 1.7% on Friday, when Sam Altman was ousted from his position at OpenAI in a boardroom coup.",2024-05-21 US blocks imports from 26 Chinese textile firms over suspected Uyghur forced labor,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/business/us-blocks-imports-china-uyghur-forced-labor-ink-intl/index.html," Published 12:34 AM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","Washington (Reuters) — The United States has barred imports from 26 Chinese cotton traders or warehouse facilities on Thursday as part of its effort to eliminate goods made with the forced labor of Uyghur minorities from the US supply chain. The companies are the latest additions to the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act Entity List that restricts the import of goods tied to what the US government has characterized as an ongoing genocide of minorities in China’s Xinjiang region. US officials believe Chinese authorities have established labor camps for Uyghurs and other Muslim minority groups in China’s western Xinjiang region. Beijing denies any abuses. Many of the cotton companies listed are based outside of Xinjiang but source their cotton from the region, the US Department of Homeland Security said in a statement. The designations help “responsible companies conduct due diligence so that, together, we can keep the products of forced labor out of our country,” Alejandro Mayorkas, Secretary of Homeland Security, said in the statement. A spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington criticized the move. “The so-called ‘Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act’ is just an instrument of a few US politicians to disrupt stability in Xinjiang and contain China’s development,” the spokesperson said. Washington has restricted imports from 65 entities since the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act Entity List law was passed in 2021, according to the department. “We enthusiastically endorse DHS’s action today to nearly double the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act’s ‘Entity List’ — while recognizing that the current list remains only a fraction of the businesses complicit in forced labor,” Representative Chris Smith and Senator Jeff Merkley, chairs of the bipartisan Congressional-Executive Commission on China, said in a statement. The lawmakers want DHS to blacklist Chinese companies in the polysilicon, aluminum, PVC and rayon industries and any company in other parts of Asia making goods for the US market with inputs sourced from Xinjiang.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['Washington (Reuters) — The United States has barred imports from 26 Chinese cotton traders or warehouse facilities on Thursday as part of its effort to eliminate goods made with the forced labor of Uyghur minorities from the US supply chain.', 'The companies are the latest additions to the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act Entity List that restricts the import of goods tied to what the US government has characterized as an ongoing genocide of minorities in China’s Xinjiang region.', 'US officials believe Chinese authorities have established labor camps for Uyghurs and other Muslim minority groups in China’s western Xinjiang region.', 'Beijing denies any abuses.', 'Many of the cotton companies listed are based outside of Xinjiang but source their cotton from the region, the US Department of Homeland Security said in a statement.', 'The designations help “responsible companies conduct due diligence so that, together, we can keep the products of forced labor out of our country,” Alejandro Mayorkas, Secretary of Homeland Security, said in the statement.', 'A spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington criticized the move.', '“The so-called ‘Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act’ is just an instrument of a few US politicians to disrupt stability in Xinjiang and contain China’s development,” the spokesperson said.', 'Washington has restricted imports from 65 entities since the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act Entity List law was passed in 2021, according to the department.', '“We enthusiastically endorse DHS’s action today to nearly double the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act’s ‘Entity List’ — while recognizing that the current list remains only a fraction of the businesses complicit in forced labor,” Representative Chris Smith and Senator Jeff Merkley, chairs of the bipartisan Congressional-Executive Commission on China, said in a statement.', 'The lawmakers want DHS to blacklist Chinese companies in the polysilicon, aluminum, PVC and rayon industries and any company in other parts of Asia making goods for the US market with inputs sourced from Xinjiang.']",-0.1724321265114111,"The designations help “responsible companies conduct due diligence so that, together, we can keep the products of forced labor out of our country,” Alejandro Mayorkas, Secretary of Homeland Security, said in the statement.",Beijing denies any abuses.,-0.2024945815404256,"“We enthusiastically endorse DHS’s action today to nearly double the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act’s ‘Entity List’ — while recognizing that the current list remains only a fraction of the businesses complicit in forced labor,” Representative Chris Smith and Senator Jeff Merkley, chairs of the bipartisan Congressional-Executive Commission on China, said in a statement.",Washington (Reuters) — The United States has barred imports from 26 Chinese cotton traders or warehouse facilities on Thursday as part of its effort to eliminate goods made with the forced labor of Uyghur minorities from the US supply chain.,2024-05-21 London: Diplomats owe more than £143m in congestion charges,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ckrrnz2gn3po,2024-05-20T16:30:23.522Z,"Diplomats owe more than £143m to Transport for London (TfL) for unpaid congestion charges, figures reveal. The US Embassy owes the largest amount at almost £14m, the Embassy of Japan owes over £10.1m and meanwhile Togo owes £40. The figures from TfL relate to unpaid fees and fines accrued by diplomats between the launch of the congestion charge in 2003 and the end of last year. In a statement the American Embassy said it believed they were exempt from the charge claiming it is a tax. The scheme involves a £15 daily fee for driving within an area of central London between 07:00 and 18:00 on weekdays, and between noon and 18:00 on weekends and bank holidays. There are discounts and exemptions for various groups of people and vehicles, such as residents, taxis and fully electric cars. TfL said in a statement: ""We and the UK government are clear that the congestion charge is a charge for a service and not a tax. ""This means that diplomats are not exempt from paying it. ""The majority of embassies in London do pay the charge, but there remains a stubborn minority who refuse to do so, despite our representations through diplomatic channels. ""We will continue to pursue all unpaid congestion charge fees and related penalty charge notices, and are pushing for the matter to be taken up at the International Court of Justice."" The Foreign Office said that they expects diplomats to pay the charge, adding that they believed that there was no legal grounds for diplomatic exemptions. A spokesperson for the US Embassy in London said: ""In accordance with international law as reflected in the 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, our position is that the congestion charge is a tax from which diplomatic missions are exempt. ""Our long-standing position is shared by many other diplomatic missions in London.” In February 2020, then-foreign secretary Dominic Raab issued a written ministerial statement revealing that his officials had written to ""a number of diplomatic missions and international organisations"" to ""press for payment"" of money owed relating to the congestion charge, parking fines and business rates. Listen to the best of BBC Radio London on Sounds and follow BBC London on Facebook, X and Instagram. Send your story ideas to hello.bbclondon@bbc.co.uk ",BBC,20/05/2024,"['Diplomats owe more than £143m to Transport for London (TfL) for unpaid congestion charges, figures reveal.', 'The US Embassy owes the largest amount at almost £14m, the Embassy of Japan owes over £10.1m and meanwhile Togo owes £40.', 'The figures from TfL relate to unpaid fees and fines accrued by diplomats between the launch of the congestion charge in 2003 and the end of last year.', 'In a statement the American Embassy said it believed they were exempt from the charge claiming it is a tax.', 'The scheme involves a £15 daily fee for driving within an area of central London between 07:00 and 18:00 on weekdays, and between noon and 18:00 on weekends and bank holidays.', 'There are discounts and exemptions for various groups of people and vehicles, such as residents, taxis and fully electric cars.', 'TfL said in a statement: ""We and the UK government are clear that the congestion charge is a charge for a service and not a tax. ""', 'This means that diplomats are not exempt from paying it. ""', 'The majority of embassies in London do pay the charge, but there remains a stubborn minority who refuse to do so, despite our representations through diplomatic channels. ""', 'We will continue to pursue all unpaid congestion charge fees and related penalty charge notices, and are pushing for the matter to be taken up at the International Court of Justice.""', 'The Foreign Office said that they expects diplomats to pay the charge, adding that they believed that there was no legal grounds for diplomatic exemptions.', 'A spokesperson for the US Embassy in London said: ""In accordance with international law as reflected in the 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, our position is that the congestion charge is a tax from which diplomatic missions are exempt. ""', 'Our long-standing position is shared by many other diplomatic missions in London.”', 'In February 2020, then-foreign secretary Dominic Raab issued a written ministerial statement revealing that his officials had written to ""a number of diplomatic missions and international organisations"" to ""press for payment"" of money owed relating to the congestion charge, parking fines and business rates.', 'Listen to the best of BBC Radio London on Sounds and follow BBC London on Facebook, X and Instagram.', 'Send your story ideas to hello.bbclondon@bbc.co.uk']",0.0975821680803077,"Listen to the best of BBC Radio London on Sounds and follow BBC London on Facebook, X and Instagram.","The majority of embassies in London do pay the charge, but there remains a stubborn minority who refuse to do so, despite our representations through diplomatic channels. """,-0.6187453866004944,,"Diplomats owe more than £143m to Transport for London (TfL) for unpaid congestion charges, figures reveal.",2024-05-21 "Ivan Boesky, famed trader in 1980s insider trading scandal, dies at 87",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/investing/ivan-boesky-dies-wall-street/index.html," Published 2:32 PM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","Ivan Boesky, the infamous insider trader whose name became synonymous with financial greed and helped inspire the fictional character Gordon Gekko in the 1987 film “Wall Street,” has died at his home in the La Jolla neighborhood of San Diego. He was 87. His daughter, Marianne Boesky, confirmed to CNN on Monday that he died in his sleep. “A dedicated and loving father above all else. A beautiful soul who inspired me to work hard, care harder, and always remain curious,” read a caption on a Monday Instagram post by the account associated with Marianne Boesky’s art gallery. Boesky famously said in a 1986 commencement speech at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley, that “greed is healthy,” inspiring in part to Gekko’s “greed is good” speech. Nicknamed “Ivan the Terrible” on a 1986 Time Magazine cover, Boesky profited from the corporate takeover boom in the 1980s, using insider information to receive advanced information on pending deals. When investigators began catching whiff of his activities, along with that of “junk bond king” Michael Milken, he agreed to cooperate with the federal government as they investigated insider trading on Wall Street, which had become a concern for the SEC by the early 1980s. He recorded calls and meetings, including with Milken, and taught investigators about stock manipulation, takeover bids and corporate raids, according to the SEC Historical Society. He pleaded guilty in 1986 to insider trading and was sentenced to three years of prison and fined $100 million, half of which went to returning the profits he made from insider trading and the other half as a civil penalty. Boesky was barred from securities trading for the rest of his life. The son of a delicatessen owner in Detroit, Boesky began his Wall Street career as a stock analyst at New York investment bank L.F. Rothschild after graduating from the Detroit College of Law in 1964. By 1975, he would open up his own brokerage firm, Ivan F. Boesky & Company, which his wife’s family helped finance. By the spring of 1985, he was reportedly the highest-paid broker on Wall Street with a net worth over $280 million (roughly $820 million in 2024). He is survived by his wife Ana, his five children and four grandchildren.",CNN,20/05/2024,"['Ivan Boesky, the infamous insider trader whose name became synonymous with financial greed and helped inspire the fictional character Gordon Gekko in the 1987 film “Wall Street,” has died at his home in the La Jolla neighborhood of San Diego.', 'He was 87.', 'His daughter, Marianne Boesky, confirmed to CNN on Monday that he died in his sleep.', '“A dedicated and loving father above all else.', 'A beautiful soul who inspired me to work hard, care harder, and always remain curious,” read a caption on a Monday Instagram post by the account associated with Marianne Boesky’s art gallery.', 'Boesky famously said in a 1986 commencement speech at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley, that “greed is healthy,” inspiring in part to Gekko’s “greed is good” speech.', 'Nicknamed “Ivan the Terrible” on a 1986 Time Magazine cover, Boesky profited from the corporate takeover boom in the 1980s, using insider information to receive advanced information on pending deals.', 'When investigators began catching whiff of his activities, along with that of “junk bond king” Michael Milken, he agreed to cooperate with the federal government as they investigated insider trading on Wall Street, which had become a concern for the SEC by the early 1980s.', 'He recorded calls and meetings, including with Milken, and taught investigators about stock manipulation, takeover bids and corporate raids, according to the SEC Historical Society.', 'He pleaded guilty in 1986 to insider trading and was sentenced to three years of prison and fined $100 million, half of which went to returning the profits he made from insider trading and the other half as a civil penalty.', 'Boesky was barred from securities trading for the rest of his life.', 'The son of a delicatessen owner in Detroit, Boesky began his Wall Street career as a stock analyst at New York investment bank L.F. Rothschild after graduating from the Detroit College of Law in 1964.', 'By 1975, he would open up his own brokerage firm, Ivan F. Boesky & Company, which his wife’s family helped finance.', 'By the spring of 1985, he was reportedly the highest-paid broker on Wall Street with a net worth over $280 million (roughly $820 million in 2024).', 'He is survived by his wife Ana, his five children and four grandchildren.']",0.1086546545324258,"A beautiful soul who inspired me to work hard, care harder, and always remain curious,” read a caption on a Monday Instagram post by the account associated with Marianne Boesky’s art gallery.","He pleaded guilty in 1986 to insider trading and was sentenced to three years of prison and fined $100 million, half of which went to returning the profits he made from insider trading and the other half as a civil penalty.",0.9994584918022156,"Boesky famously said in a 1986 commencement speech at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley, that “greed is healthy,” inspiring in part to Gekko’s “greed is good” speech.",,2024-05-21 Vox launches subscription program as news publishers race to diversify revenue streams,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/media/vox-relaunch-reliable-sources/index.html," Updated 10:30 PM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","Vox is preparing to celebrate its 10th birthday — making a major change to its business model that reflects how digital news publishers are scrambling to evolve as they are increasingly starved of referral traffic and advertising revenue. Not only will Vox debut a refreshed website on Tuesday morning to mark its 10th trip around the sun (fear not, the trademark yellow is not going away), it will also launch a membership program, its executives told CNN Monday, as the digital publisher becomes the latest news outlet to lean into subscriptions to diversify and grow its revenue stream. The subscription program — which will cost $5 a month, or $50 a year — will give members access to an array of exclusive content, including newsletters, a digital magazine, a monthly bonus episode of “The Highlight Podcast,” live virtual tapings of audio programs, interactive video interviews, and more. “It is so incredibly important to diversify our revenue and business model,” Swati Sharma, the editor-in-chief and publisher of Vox, told CNN by phone Monday. “We have to be strategic.” While the site and its suite of content will continue to remain free to readers, its new members-only program is additive to Vox’s existing content and will be the only programming behind a paywall. The outlet will count the revenue it earns from subscriptions as an added stream, with the publisher opting for a hybrid model consisting of multiple forms of revenue, including advertising and grants. Sharma said that building a members-only tier for Vox’s loyal fans was the natural step after finding success soliciting reader donations, which the outlet has done since 2020. In those four years, it has received more than 100,000 contributions, Vox Media’s consumer revenue chief Priyanka Arya told CNN. Now, with members-only benefits aimed at enticing subscribers, coupled with the hiring of Bill Carey as executive director of memberships, the digital publication is hoping to strengthen its relationship with readers. “We are taking a bet on people caring about news organizations,” Sharma told me. “But I think that it’s a bet worth taking.” The move could not come at a more critical juncture. News publishers are navigating challenging terrain, and most have been forced to undergo painful layoffs in recent years, including Vox. The stormy seas have been made even tougher by the rapid advancement and deployment of artificial intelligence. Not only has Meta turned its back on news publishers, but Google, which so many outlets have become quite dependent on, announced last week it will infuse its dominant search engine with A.I. That move has prompted alarm over the possibility referral traffic to news outlets will slow to a trickle. “It worries me, and it should worry everyone in journalism,” Sharma said. The daunting circumstance has made establishing direct pipelines between news outlets and audiences more important than ever. Which is likely why so many major newsrooms have signaled they will, in one way or another, wade into creating and/or bolstering subscription models that include members-only content to supplement other revenue streams. Looking ahead to its next decade, Sharma told me she wants to see Vox identify solutions to some of the biggest problems plaguing the world, expanding on its coverage of issues ranging from climate change to gun violence to loneliness. Sharma emphasized that while it is important to cover such paramount issues, it is equally important to offer readers a way to walk away empowered with steps they can take to help improve society. “Vox was such an incredible bet to make,” Sharma said. “It was offering something very specific at that time, which still resonates … Vox pioneered the explainer format and that is everywhere today.” “We’ve explained the news,” Sharma added. “The next step is shaping the world.”",CNN,20/05/2024,"['Voxis preparing to celebrate its 10th birthday — making a major change to its business model that reflects how digital news publishers are scrambling to evolve as they are increasingly starved of referral traffic and advertising revenue.', 'Not only will Vox debut a refreshed website on Tuesday morning to mark its 10th trip around the sun (fear not, the trademark yellow is not going away), it will also launch a membership program, its executives told CNN Monday, as the digital publisher becomes the latest news outlet to lean into subscriptions to diversify and grow its revenue stream.', 'The subscription program — which will cost $5 a month, or $50 a year — will give members access to an array of exclusive content, including newsletters, a digital magazine, a monthly bonus episode of “The Highlight Podcast,” live virtual tapings of audio programs, interactive video interviews, and more.', '“It is so incredibly important to diversify our revenue and business model,”Swati Sharma, the editor-in-chief and publisher of Vox, told CNN by phone Monday. “', 'We have to be strategic.”', 'While the site and its suite of content will continue to remain free to readers, its new members-only program is additive to Vox’s existing content and will be the only programming behind a paywall.', 'The outlet will count the revenue it earns from subscriptions as an added stream, with the publisher opting for a hybrid model consisting of multiple forms of revenue, including advertising and grants.', 'Sharma said that building a members-only tier for Vox’s loyal fans was the natural step after finding success soliciting reader donations, which the outlet has done since 2020.', 'In those four years, it has received more than 100,000 contributions,Vox Media’sconsumer revenue chiefPriyanka Aryatold CNN.', 'Now, with members-only benefits aimed at enticing subscribers, coupled with the hiring ofBill Careyas executive director of memberships, the digital publication is hoping to strengthen its relationship with readers.', '“We are taking a bet on people caring about news organizations,” Sharma told me. “', 'But I think that it’s a bet worth taking.”', 'The move could not come at a more critical juncture.', 'News publishers are navigating challenging terrain, and most have been forced to undergo painful layoffs in recent years, including Vox.', 'The stormy seas have been made even tougher by the rapid advancement and deployment of artificial intelligence.', 'Not only hasMetaturned its back on news publishers, butGoogle, which so many outlets have become quite dependent on, announced last week it will infuse its dominant search engine with A.I. That move hasprompted alarmover the possibility referral traffic to news outlets will slow to a trickle.', '“It worries me, and it should worry everyone in journalism,” Sharma said.', 'The daunting circumstance has made establishing direct pipelines between news outlets and audiences more important than ever.', 'Which is likely why so many major newsrooms have signaled they will, in one way or another, wade into creating and/or bolstering subscription models that include members-only content to supplement other revenue streams.', 'Looking ahead to its next decade, Sharma told me she wants to see Vox identify solutions to some of the biggest problems plaguing the world, expanding on its coverage of issues ranging from climate change to gun violence to loneliness.', 'Sharma emphasized that while it is important to cover such paramount issues, it is equally important to offer readers a way to walk away empowered with steps they can take to help improve society.', '“Vox was such an incredible bet to make,” Sharma said. “', 'It was offering something very specific at that time, which still resonates … Vox pioneered the explainer format and that is everywhere today.”', '“We’ve explained the news,” Sharma added. “', 'The next step is shaping the world.”']",0.1249494793535151,"Sharma said that building a members-only tier for Vox’s loyal fans was the natural step after finding success soliciting reader donations, which the outlet has done since 2020.","Looking ahead to its next decade, Sharma told me she wants to see Vox identify solutions to some of the biggest problems plaguing the world, expanding on its coverage of issues ranging from climate change to gun violence to loneliness.",0.3405313849449157,"Now, with members-only benefits aimed at enticing subscribers, coupled with the hiring ofBill Careyas executive director of memberships, the digital publication is hoping to strengthen its relationship with readers.","Not only hasMetaturned its back on news publishers, butGoogle, which so many outlets have become quite dependent on, announced last week it will infuse its dominant search engine with A.I. That move hasprompted alarmover the possibility referral traffic to news outlets will slow to a trickle.",2024-05-21 Microsoft asks some employees in China to move to other countries,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/16/tech/microsoft-china-employees-relocate-hnk-intl/index.html," Updated 11:26 PM EDT, Thu May 16, 2024 ","Microsoft has asked at least 100 of its employees in China to consider moving to other countries, according to Chinese state media reports. The reports come as relations between Beijing and Washington deteriorate over technologies like artificial intelligence (AI) and clean energy. Microsoft employees, mostly involved with cloud computing, were recently offered the opportunity to work in the United States, Australia or Ireland, among other countries, state-run outlet The Paper said in a report Wednesday, citing an unnamed source. “Providing internal opportunities is a regular part of managing our global business. As part of this process, we shared an optional internal transfer opportunity with a subset of employees,” a Microsoft spokesperson told CNN on Thursday. It did not specify the number of workers who had received the offer. The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday that Microsoft asked as many as 800 employees, mostly engineers with Chinese nationality working on cloud computing and AI, to consider relocating. The Journal, which cited unnamed sources, reported last year that the Biden administration was preparing to restrict Chinese firms’ access to US cloud services. The company entered China in 1992 and for decades has counted on its well-known Beijing-based research lab, Microsoft Research Lab Asia, to help it build influence. “Everyone is confused,” an employee told the Paper, as the affected staff has been given less than a month to decide. Yicai, a Chinese state-owned financial media outlet, wrote that more than 100 employees were affected. It added that people had the option not to move. The reports come in the same week President Joe Biden announced tariffs on $18 billion worth of imports of Chinese electric vehicles and an array of other products. Biden said he was trying to prevent unfair competition from China decimating US industries. The tech war between the two economic superpowers has been intensifying for years. In October, the Biden administration limited the types of semiconductors that American companies can sell to China. In recent months, the United States has also enlisted its allies in Europe and Asia in restricting sales of advanced chipmaking equipment to China. Beijing has hit back by imposing its own curbs on exports of germanium and gallium, two elements essential for making semiconductors.",CNN,16/05/2024,"['Microsoft has asked at least 100 of its employees in China to consider moving to other countries, according to Chinese state media reports.', 'The reports come as relations between Beijing and Washington deteriorate over technologies like artificial intelligence (AI) and clean energy.', 'Microsoft employees, mostly involved with cloud computing, were recently offered the opportunity to work in the United States, Australia or Ireland, among other countries, state-run outlet The Paper said in a report Wednesday, citing an unnamed source.', '“Providing internal opportunities is a regular part of managing our global business.', 'As part of this process, we shared an optional internal transfer opportunity with a subset of employees,” a Microsoft spokesperson told CNN on Thursday.', 'It did not specify the number of workers who had received the offer.', 'The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday that Microsoft asked as many as 800 employees, mostly engineers with Chinese nationality working on cloud computing and AI, to consider relocating.', 'The Journal, which cited unnamed sources, reported last year that the Biden administration was preparing to restrict Chinese firms’ access to US cloud services.', 'The company entered China in 1992 and for decades has counted on its well-known Beijing-based research lab, Microsoft Research Lab Asia, to help it build influence.', '“Everyone is confused,” an employee told the Paper, as the affected staff has been given less than a month to decide.', 'Yicai, a Chinese state-owned financial media outlet, wrote that more than 100 employees were affected.', 'It added that people had the option not to move.', 'The reports come in the same week President Joe Bidenannounced tariffs on $18 billion worth of imports of Chinese electric vehicles and an array of other products.', 'Biden said he was trying to prevent unfair competition from China decimating US industries.', 'The tech war between the two economic superpowers has been intensifying for years.', 'In October, the Biden administration limited the types of semiconductors that American companies can sell to China.', 'In recent months, the United States has also enlisted its allies inEuropeandAsiain restricting sales of advanced chipmaking equipment to China.', 'Beijing hashit backby imposing its own curbs on exports of germanium and gallium, two elements essential for making semiconductors.']",0.0690812979440515,The reports come as relations between Beijing and Washington deteriorate over technologies like artificial intelligence (AI) and clean energy.,The tech war between the two economic superpowers has been intensifying for years.,-0.8734054684638977,,The reports come as relations between Beijing and Washington deteriorate over technologies like artificial intelligence (AI) and clean energy.,2024-05-21 Nestlé is releasing a lineup of frozen food for people on Ozempic and other GLP-1 drugs,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/21/food/nestle-glp-1-food-vital-proteins/index.html," Published 7:00 AM EDT, Tue May 21, 2024 ","Nestlé, the maker of frozen food brands like Stouffer’s and DiGiorno, is slimming down with a new line of meals for people taking GLP-1 drugs, such as Ozempic, for weight loss. The new frozen food brand called Vital Pursuit will consist of 12 portion-controlled meals, high in protein plus fiber, “intended to be a companion for GLP-1 weight loss medication users and consumers focused on weight management,” the company announced Tuesday. It’s the first brand from Nestlé specifically for people on drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy, joining other companies in expanding to cash in and remain relevant. J.P. Morgan predicts that obesity medication will soon be a $100 billion market and sees about 9% of the US population being on a weight-loss drug by 2030. The long-term effects of GLP-1s — or glucagon-like peptide 1 agonists — on people’s health remains unclear. However, a recent study on Wagovy significantly reduced heart risk in addition to helping with weight loss. The results showed that the average weight loss for people using the medication was sustained for up to 208 weeks, or four years. The drugs have changed the way people eat, both in portion sizes and frequency, according to the company. Nestlé North America CEO Steve Presley said in a press release that Vital Pursuit “provides accessible, great-tasting food options that support the needs of consumers in this emerging category.” A full lineup of Vital Pursuit options was not immediately released, but it will hit grocery stores later this year with a suggested price of $4.99 or less. The meals are made with whole grains or protein pasta and consist of sandwich melts, pizzas and bowls, enriched in nutrients like potassium, calcium and iron that the prescription drug users might miss from eating less food overall. Adding a brand like this to Nestlé’s portfolio for consumer brands makes sense, according to Neil Saunders, retail analyst and managing director at GlobalData Retail, especially since GLP-1 drugs could be “disruptive” to food manufacturers. Nestlé also sells Lean Cuisine, a diet-focused frozen food brand launched more than 40 years ago to attract calorie-counting customers, but it’s “seen as old-school” by customers, Saunders told CNN. “The new brand is positioned as a much more scientific approach with an emphasis on nutrition and balance,” he said. “Nestlé is hoping to gain new customers and widen its audience.” The sudden rise of GLP-1 drugs is also seen as an opportunity by other companies, like GNC, a once-bankrupt chain that sells vitamins and nutritional supplements. Last month, the retailer announced that it was adding a dedicated section in its US stores with vitamins, protein shakes and supplements tailored to people on GLP-1 medications. Costco has started offering Ozempic at its US pharmacies through its low-cost health care partner Sesame. The program, launched in April, includes a video consultation with a weight loss doctor or specialist, a GLP-1 or weight loss prescription, if appropriate, and ongoing support through unlimited messaging and guidance with a health care provider. WeightWatchers launched a membership plan for people that gives members access to doctors who can prescribe these medications. It also made a $100 million-plus deal to buy Sequence, a telehealth business that offers virtual prescriptions to patients for these weight loss drugs where appropriate. Gyms are also adjusting their strategies as more of their members take medications for weight loss. Luxury gyms, such as Life Time, are acquiring weight loss clinics with doctors who can prescribe GLP-1s, while Equinox debuted a personal training program for members taking GLP-1s to preserve muscle mass. Food companies, like Nestlé, are also bracing for GLP-1 consumers to buy fewer sugary snacks and drinks. J.P. Morgan last year said that current GLP-1 users purchased around 8% less food — including snacks, soft drinks and high-carb products — over the prior year, compared with consumers who were not on these drugs. Vital Pursuit “sends a signal to investors and stakeholders that Nestlé is looking at weight-loss drugs and is responding to the opportunity,” Saunders said. CNN’s Nathaniel Meyersohn contributed to this report.",CNN,21/05/2024,"['Nestlé, the maker of frozen food brands like Stouffer’s and DiGiorno, is slimming down with a new line of meals for people taking GLP-1 drugs, such as Ozempic, for weight loss.', 'The new frozen food brand called Vital Pursuit will consist of 12 portion-controlled meals, high in protein plus fiber, “intended to be a companion for GLP-1 weight loss medication users and consumers focused on weight management,” the company announced Tuesday.', 'It’s the first brand from Nestlé specifically for people on drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy, joining other companies in expanding to cash in and remain relevant.', 'J.P. Morgan predicts that obesity medication will soon be a $100 billion market and sees about 9% of the US population being on a weight-loss drug by 2030.', 'The long-term effects of GLP-1s — or glucagon-like peptide 1 agonists — on people’s health remains unclear.', 'However, a recent study on Wagovy significantly reduced heart risk in addition to helping with weight loss.', 'The results showed that the average weight loss for people using the medication was sustained for up to 208 weeks, or four years.', 'The drugs have changed the way people eat, both in portion sizes and frequency, according to the company.', 'Nestlé North America CEO Steve Presley said in a press release that Vital Pursuit “provides accessible, great-tasting food options that support the needs of consumers in this emerging category.”', 'A full lineup of Vital Pursuit options was not immediately released, but it will hit grocery stores later this year with a suggested price of $4.99 or less.', 'The meals are made with whole grains or protein pasta and consist of sandwich melts, pizzas and bowls, enriched in nutrients like potassium, calcium and iron that the prescription drug users might miss from eating less food overall.', 'Adding a brand like this to Nestlé’s portfolio for consumer brands makes sense, according to Neil Saunders, retail analyst and managing director at GlobalData Retail, especially since GLP-1 drugs could be “disruptive” to food manufacturers.', 'Nestlé also sells Lean Cuisine, a diet-focused frozen food brand launched more than 40 years ago to attract calorie-counting customers, but it’s “seen as old-school” by customers, Saunders told CNN.', '“The new brand is positioned as a much more scientific approach with an emphasis on nutrition and balance,” he said. “', 'Nestlé is hoping to gain new customers and widen its audience.”', 'The sudden rise of GLP-1 drugs is also seen as an opportunity by other companies, like GNC, a once-bankrupt chain that sells vitamins and nutritional supplements.', 'Last month, the retailer announced that it was adding a dedicated section in its US stores with vitamins, protein shakes and supplements tailored to people on GLP-1 medications.', 'Costco has started offering Ozempic at its US pharmacies through its low-cost health care partner Sesame.', 'The program, launched in April, includes a video consultation with a weight loss doctor or specialist, a GLP-1 or weight loss prescription, if appropriate, and ongoing support through unlimited messaging and guidance with a health care provider.', 'WeightWatcherslaunched a membership planfor people that gives members access to doctors who can prescribe these medications.', 'It also made a $100 million-plus deal to buy Sequence, a telehealth business that offers virtual prescriptions to patients for these weight loss drugs where appropriate.', 'Gyms are also adjusting their strategies as more of their members takemedicationsfor weight loss.', 'Luxury gyms, such as Life Time, are acquiring weight loss clinics with doctors who can prescribe GLP-1s, while Equinox debuted a personal training program for members taking GLP-1s to preserve muscle mass.', 'Food companies, like Nestlé, are also bracing for GLP-1 consumers to buy fewer sugary snacks and drinks.', 'J.P. Morgan last year said that current GLP-1 users purchased around 8% less food — including snacks, soft drinks and high-carb products — over the prior year, compared with consumers who were not on these drugs.', 'Vital Pursuit “sends a signal to investors and stakeholders that Nestlé is looking at weight-loss drugs and is responding to the opportunity,” Saunders said.', 'CNN’s Nathaniel Meyersohn contributed to this report.']",0.1310054685775712,"Nestlé North America CEO Steve Presley said in a press release that Vital Pursuit “provides accessible, great-tasting food options that support the needs of consumers in this emerging category.”",J.P. Morgan predicts that obesity medication will soon be a $100 billion market and sees about 9% of the US population being on a weight-loss drug by 2030.,0.7751939730210737,Nestlé is hoping to gain new customers and widen its audience.”,"J.P. Morgan last year said that current GLP-1 users purchased around 8% less food — including snacks, soft drinks and high-carb products — over the prior year, compared with consumers who were not on these drugs.",2024-05-21 3 ways Apple’s monopoly lawsuit could change the iPhone experience for fans,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/tech/apples-iphone-changes-lawsuit/index.html," Published 6:30 AM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","When Apple launched its first Mac computer in 1984, with its iconic Mac smiley-face “hello” greeting, it wanted to differentiate itself in the fledgling PC market. The Mac was approachable with its friendly, innovative design – Apple’s way of setting the Mac apart in the confusing PC landscape. That consumer-friendly mantra still exists today, with Apple carefully curating an easy-breezy yet controlled user experience across its products, including the billions of iPhones used around the world. But the Biden administration believes Apple took that too far. On Thursday, the Department of Justice sued Apple for illegally monopolizing the smartphone market. In a press conference, the government provided a long list of how Apple has allegedly squashed competition with restrictive app store terms, high fees and its “walled-garden” approach, restricting how third-party companies interact with its brands and services. The company denied the lawsuit’s allegations and said it plans to fight them. Apple added that the lawsuit could empower the government “to take a heavy hand in designing people’s technology.” But if successful, the lawsuit could ripple across Apple’s products and services. Although the suit could take years to play out, here’s a closer look what it may eventually mean for iPhone users: If found liable, the company could be forced to change a number of things. One such change is how iPhone users could get greater access to “super apps” that have been largely restricted before. The term refers to one-stop-shop apps that allow for messaging, ordering food, payment processing and other capabilities all within one platform. According to Dipanjan Chatterjee, a principal analyst at market research firm Forrester, super apps most threaten Apple’s preeminence in the lives of its customers. “An offering like WeChat, dubbed China’s everything app, can provide an alternative to the Apple ecosystem for people to communicate, bank, share memories, talk to businesses and more,” he said. “What Apple fears most is becoming irrelevant to its customers.” At the same time, super apps like WeChat are created by larger companies and could, therefore, put some smaller companies at a disadvantage. And the concept hasn’t been welcomed much in the US anyway. The US government, however, could argue that lack of interest may be due to Apple’s high share of the smartphone market and its resistance to offer super apps in its store, Chatterjee said. Apple may also be required to offer more support for cross-platform messaging, an issue the company previously said it’s already working on. The company lets iPhone users send high-quality photos and videos to one another, but similar texts to Android phones are slower and grainy. It also maintains those messages in green bubbles, creating a kind of class divide, critics argue. In November, the company said it will add new features, such as read receipts, typing indicators, better support for group chats and higher quality media sharing of images and videos, across platforms to help close the gap. Apple’s move to add support for the standard called RCS (rich communication services) is intended to roll out later this year. RCS is considered the replacement to alternatives such as SMS, or short messaging service, and can work over both Wi-Fi and mobile data. The change followed pressure from both regulators and competitors to more seamlessly work across operating systems. The European Union’s Digital Markets Act, for example, requires companies to make their key services interoperable between platforms. The US government could require the same. Another likely change is how hardware from other companies, such as smartwatches, will interact with the Apple range of devices and software, including the iPhone and Apple’s services like Fitness+. The company has also required Apple Watch users to own iOS devices as a way to keep them locked into its existing ecosystem. Chatterjee said making this change would have both positives and negatives. “The net result would reside somewhere along the spectrum of access to more and cheaper options but also the devaluation of the customer experience that is so highly prized by Apple’s customers,” he said. The Biden administration has also taken issue with Apple’s lack of support for mobile cloud services. Loosening this could allow users to access games and other cloud-based apps without having to pay for pricey hardware. The DOJ lawsuit claims Apple’s behavior has illegally hindered competition, kept its customers locked into its products and prevented other companies from innovating. Although the Biden administration will have to prove these harms, some critics say any potential changes Apple could make will negatively impact the user experience. David McQueen, a research director at ABI Research, said he recognizes that the content and applications market should be open, and Apple needs to avoid monopolistic advantages that can restrict competition, push up prices or block innovation. But Apple’s success stems in part to its tight grip on its products and services, keeping things intuitive and seamless. “If Apple is forced to comply, it could potentially spell the end to the provision of this consistent and unified user experience, although by the same token, consumers will be open to a greater choice of apps and services, helping more developers and providers,” McQueen said. Chatterjee noted some people are drawn to the Apple family of products precisely because of the carefully managed ecosystem’s ease of use. Apple may have to work that much harder to preserve the integrity of its experience, but any changes probably won’t be enough to make customers to leave and go elsewhere. “The vast majority of Apple customers would probably be happier with some more choice and lower prices as long as it did not hamper their levels of customer experience, which is threatened by the less control Apple has over the experience,” Chatterjee said. But he added those currently outside of the Apple ecosystem will likely benefit by “plugging in opportunistically without having to go all in with Apple.”",CNN,26/03/2024,"['When Apple launched its first Mac computer in 1984, with its iconic Mac smiley-face “hello” greeting, it wanted to differentiate itself in the fledgling PC market.', 'The Mac was approachable with its friendly, innovative design – Apple’s way of setting the Mac apart in the confusing PC landscape.', 'That consumer-friendly mantra still exists today, with Apple carefully curating an easy-breezy yet controlled user experience across its products, including the billions of iPhones used around the world.', 'But the Biden administration believes Apple took that too far.', 'On Thursday, the Department of Justice sued Apple for illegally monopolizing the smartphone market.', 'In a press conference, the government provided a long list of how Apple has allegedly squashed competition with restrictive app store terms, high fees and its “walled-garden” approach, restricting how third-party companies interact with its brands and services.', 'The company denied the lawsuit’s allegations and said it plans to fight them.', 'Apple added that the lawsuit could empower the government “to take a heavy hand in designing people’s technology.”', 'But if successful, the lawsuit could ripple across Apple’s products and services.', 'Although the suit could take years to play out, here’s a closer look what it may eventually mean for iPhone users: If found liable, the company could be forced to change a number of things.', 'One such change is how iPhone users could get greater access to “super apps” that have been largely restricted before.', 'The term refers to one-stop-shop apps that allow for messaging, ordering food, payment processing and other capabilities all within one platform.', 'According to Dipanjan Chatterjee, a principal analyst at market research firm Forrester, super apps most threaten Apple’s preeminence in the lives of its customers.', '“An offering like WeChat, dubbed China’s everything app, can provide an alternative to the Apple ecosystem for people to communicate, bank, share memories, talk to businesses and more,” he said.', '“What Apple fears most is becoming irrelevant to its customers.”', 'At the same time, super apps like WeChat are created by larger companies and could, therefore, put some smaller companies at a disadvantage.', 'And the concept hasn’t been welcomed much in the US anyway.', 'The US government, however, could argue that lack of interest may be due to Apple’s high share of the smartphone market and its resistance to offer super apps in its store, Chatterjee said.', 'Apple may also be required to offer more support for cross-platform messaging, an issue the company previously said it’s already working on.', 'The company lets iPhone users send high-quality photos and videos to one another, but similar texts to Android phones are slower and grainy.', 'It also maintains those messages in green bubbles, creating a kind of class divide, critics argue.', 'In November, the company said it will add new features, such as read receipts, typing indicators, better support for group chats and higher quality media sharing of images and videos, across platforms to help close the gap.', 'Apple’s move to add support for the standard called RCS (rich communication services) is intended to roll out later this year.', 'RCS is considered the replacement to alternatives such as SMS, or short messaging service, and can work over both Wi-Fi and mobile data.', 'The change followed pressure from both regulators and competitors to more seamlessly work across operating systems.', 'The European Union’s Digital Markets Act, for example, requires companies to make their key services interoperable between platforms.', 'The US government could require the same.', 'Another likely change is how hardware from other companies, such as smartwatches, will interact with the Apple range of devices and software, including the iPhone and Apple’s services like Fitness+.', 'The company has also required Apple Watch users to own iOS devices as a way to keep them locked into its existing ecosystem.', 'Chatterjee said making this change would have both positives and negatives.', '“The net result would reside somewhere along the spectrum of access to more and cheaper options but also the devaluation of the customer experience that is so highly prized by Apple’s customers,” he said.', 'The Biden administration has also taken issue with Apple’s lack of support for mobile cloud services.', 'Loosening this could allow users to access games and other cloud-based apps without having to pay for pricey hardware.', 'The DOJ lawsuit claims Apple’s behavior has illegally hindered competition, kept its customers locked into its products and prevented other companies from innovating.', 'Although the Biden administration will have to prove these harms, some critics say any potential changes Apple could make will negatively impact the user experience.', 'David McQueen, a research director at ABI Research, said he recognizes that the content and applications market should be open, and Apple needs to avoid monopolistic advantages that can restrict competition, push up prices or block innovation.', 'But Apple’s success stems in part to its tight grip on its products and services, keeping things intuitive and seamless.', '“If Apple is forced to comply, it could potentially spell the end to the provision of this consistent and unified user experience, although by the same token, consumers will be open to a greater choice of apps and services, helping more developers and providers,” McQueen said.', 'Chatterjee noted some people are drawn to the Apple family of products precisely because of the carefully managed ecosystem’s ease of use.', 'Apple may have to work that much harder to preserve the integrity of its experience, but any changes probably won’t be enough to make customers to leave and go elsewhere.', '“The vast majority of Apple customers would probably be happier with some more choice and lower prices as long as it did not hamper their levels of customer experience, which is threatened by the less control Apple has over the experience,” Chatterjee said.', 'But he added those currently outside of the Apple ecosystem will likely benefit by “plugging in opportunistically without having to go all in with Apple.”']",0.2470050112228104,"In November, the company said it will add new features, such as read receipts, typing indicators, better support for group chats and higher quality media sharing of images and videos, across platforms to help close the gap.",The company denied the lawsuit’s allegations and said it plans to fight them.,-0.151834687590599,"“The vast majority of Apple customers would probably be happier with some more choice and lower prices as long as it did not hamper their levels of customer experience, which is threatened by the less control Apple has over the experience,” Chatterjee said.","The DOJ lawsuit claims Apple’s behavior has illegally hindered competition, kept its customers locked into its products and prevented other companies from innovating.",2024-05-21 Judge’s stern rebuke of Elon Musk’s X gives researchers fresh hope,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/tech/judges-stern-rebuke-of-elon-musks-x-gives-researchers-fresh-hope/index.html," Published 1:17 PM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","A federal judge’s decision this week reprimanding Elon Musk’s X will have reverberating effects on efforts to hold influential online platforms accountable, legal experts and advocacy groups say. On Monday, District Judge Charles Breyer dismissed and excoriated a lawsuit by X against online watchdog group Center for Countering Digital Hate as an attempt to silence the non-profit group for sounding alarms about hate speech on the platform. Breyer wrote in Monday’s order that the lawsuit was “unabashedly” about “punishing” reports written by CCDH, which X had accused of campaigning to drive away its advertisers. Breyer held that the reports were “unquestionably” protected by the group’s free speech rights. Now, that decision could embolden other research groups and Musk critics who have faced legal threats from the billionaire. The CCDH case — in the US District Court for the Northern District of California — has been widely viewed as a bellwether for research and accountability on X, where Musk has restored the accounts of previously banned White supremacists and spreaders of misinformation and where Musk himself has amplified various conspiracy theories. And CCDH is not the only organization that has faced attacks by self-proclaimed “free speech absolutist” Musk after criticizing or raising concerns about his platform. “This is an important decision that sees Elon Musk’s lawsuit for what it is — an effort to punish his critics for constitutionally protected speech and to deter researchers from studying his platform,” said Alex Abdo, litigation director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, which had filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case arguing that private companies should not be allowed to use breach of contract claims to punish criticism. “Society needs reliable and ethical research into social media platforms, and often that research relies on being able to study publicly available posts,” Abdo said. X said it plans to appeal Breyer’s decision. In his first year as owner of X, formerly known as Twitter, Musk threatened legal action against the Anti-Defamation League for defamation, as well as against Microsoft and Meta for allegedly improper data and trade secret access, respectively. None of those threats ever amounted to real lawsuits. He did, however, sue the progressive media watchdog Media Matters over its analysis highlighting antisemitic and pro-Nazi content on X, alleging that the group’s testing methodology was not representative of how real users experience the site and that the report was designed to drive away advertisers. Legal experts have described that case as “weak” on the merits and as a “bogus” attempt to chill criticism of X. This week’s court decision may be only a temporary setback in Musk’s wider plan to stifle criticism, said Media Matters CEO Angelo Carusone. Musk’s new playbook, Carusone said, enlists the help of sympathetic Republican attorneys general to investigate independent reporting organizations and tie them up in legal proceedings. The states of Texas and Missouri each announced probes into Media Matters following X’s lawsuit against the group, to which Musk responded, “Great!” As recently as Monday, Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey filed a petition in state court seeking to compel Media Matters’ cooperation with his investigation. The filing came a week after he appeared with Musk in a live event on X — which Carusone said shows how Musk hopes to deputize the power of government to silence his critics. “They have every reason to do it,” Carusone said of the AGs’ investigations. “They get the political benefits, they get the attention. There doesn’t seem to be any cost to them yet. And if they are successful at developing this new playbook, this new terrain, legally, then it’s going to pave the way for them to just use this tool and tactic over and over and over again.” A representative for X did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Carusone’s claims. Researchers from non-profits and academic institutions have had a harder time studying X since Musk’s takeover in 2022. Academics need large samples of posts, shares, likes and other data to study social media trends in mis- and disinformation, public health, elections and other key topics. But one of Musk’s first changes at X was to put access to platform data behind a steep paywall. Researchers and civil society groups said the new subscription fees — costing up to $2.5 million a year — were “outrageously expensive” and made it impossible to do their work, reducing transparency of a critical platform. The change may have forced some researchers to rely more heavily on first-person observational data to draw conclusions about user behavior on X. Groups like CCDH have also used automated “scraping” of publicly viewable content from X rather than paying the company for data directly, a tactic that helped give rise to X’s initial lawsuit. Efforts by X and other social media companies to limit research transparency makes them less accountable to the public at best and, at worst, could mask malicious behavior, said David Karpf, an associate professor in the School of Media and Public Affairs at George Washington University. “We need independent research to have any real measure of what’s going on at X/Twitter. Musk is only ever going to release data that makes his company look good,” Karpf said. “These platforms are too big and too vital to the spread of information to be left unmonitored.” “This is an election year,” Karpf added, “and the platforms are taking steps to make it harder to monitor how their services are used for malignant ends.” Free Press, another media accountability organization that has been critical of Musk’s leadership of X and which called for advertisers to pause their spending on the platform shortly after his takeover, also celebrated Breyer’s ruling as potentially removing at least one hurdle that watchdog organizations face. “The guardrails for democracy are hanging by a thread and we have dwindling insights into platform practices as researchers face lawsuits, congressional subpoenas and other scare tactics,” said Nora Benavidez, senior counsel and director of digital rights at Free Press. Ultimately, Benavidez called the ruling “a reminder that platform accountability is essential and will inevitably prevail when up against bullies like Musk who try to silence us.”",CNN,26/03/2024,"['A federal judge’s decision this week reprimanding Elon Musk’s X will have reverberating effects on efforts to hold influential online platforms accountable, legal experts and advocacy groups say.', 'On Monday, District Judge Charles Breyer dismissed and excoriated a lawsuit by X against online watchdog group Center for Countering Digital Hate as an attempt to silence the non-profit group for sounding alarms about hate speech on the platform.', 'Breyer wrote in Monday’s order that the lawsuit was “unabashedly” about “punishing” reports written by CCDH, which X had accused of campaigning to drive away its advertisers.', 'Breyer held that the reports were “unquestionably” protected by the group’s free speech rights.', 'Now, that decision could embolden other research groups and Musk critics who have faced legal threats from the billionaire.', 'The CCDH case — in the US District Court for the Northern District of California —has been widely viewed as a bellwether for research and accountability on X, where Musk has restored the accounts of previously banned White supremacists and spreaders of misinformation and where Musk himself has amplified various conspiracy theories.', 'And CCDH is not the only organization that has faced attacks by self-proclaimed “free speech absolutist” Musk after criticizing or raising concerns about his platform.', '“This is an important decision that sees Elon Musk’s lawsuit for what it is — an effort to punish his critics for constitutionally protected speech and to deter researchers from studying his platform,” said Alex Abdo, litigation director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, which had filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case arguing that private companies should not be allowed to use breach of contract claims to punish criticism.', '“Society needs reliable and ethical research into social media platforms, and often that research relies on being able to study publicly available posts,” Abdo said.', 'X said it plans to appeal Breyer’s decision.', 'In his first year as owner of X, formerly known as Twitter, Musk threatened legal action against the Anti-Defamation League for defamation, as well as against Microsoft and Meta for allegedly improper data and trade secret access, respectively.', 'None of those threats ever amounted to real lawsuits.', 'He did, however, sue the progressive media watchdog Media Matters over itsanalysishighlighting antisemitic and pro-Nazi content on X, alleging that the group’s testing methodology was not representative of how real users experience the site and that the report was designed to drive away advertisers.', 'Legal experts have described that case as “weak” on the merits and as a “bogus” attempt to chill criticism of X. This week’s court decision may be only a temporary setback in Musk’s wider plan to stifle criticism, said Media Matters CEO Angelo Carusone.', 'Musk’s new playbook, Carusone said, enlists the help of sympathetic Republican attorneys general to investigate independent reporting organizations and tie them up in legal proceedings.', 'The states of Texas and Missouri each announced probes into Media Matters following X’s lawsuit against the group, to which Musk responded, “Great!”', 'As recently as Monday, Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey filed a petition in state court seeking to compel Media Matters’ cooperation with his investigation.', 'The filing came a week after he appeared with Musk in a live event on X — which Carusone said shows how Musk hopes to deputize the power of government to silence his critics.', '“They have every reason to do it,” Carusone said of the AGs’ investigations. “', 'They get the political benefits, they get the attention.', 'There doesn’t seem to be any cost to them yet.', 'And if they are successful at developing this new playbook, this new terrain, legally, then it’s going to pave the way for them to just use this tool and tactic over and over and over again.”', 'A representative for X did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Carusone’s claims.', 'Researchers from non-profits and academic institutions have had a harder time studying X since Musk’s takeover in 2022.', 'Academics need large samples of posts, shares, likes and other data to study social media trends in mis- and disinformation, public health, elections and other key topics.', 'But one of Musk’s first changes at X was to put access to platform data behind a steep paywall.', 'Researchers and civil society groups said the new subscription fees — costing up to $2.5 million a year —were “outrageously expensive” and made it impossible to do their work, reducing transparency of a critical platform.', 'The change may have forced some researchers to rely more heavily on first-person observational data to draw conclusions about user behavior on X. Groups like CCDH have also used automated “scraping” of publicly viewable content from X rather than paying the company for data directly, a tactic that helped give rise to X’s initial lawsuit.', 'Efforts by X and other social media companies to limit research transparency makes them less accountable to the public at best and, at worst, could mask malicious behavior, said David Karpf, an associate professor in the School of Media and Public Affairs at George Washington University.', '“We need independent research to have any real measure of what’s going on at X/Twitter.', 'Musk is only ever going to release data that makes his company look good,” Karpf said. “', 'These platforms are too big and too vital to the spread of information to be left unmonitored.”', '“This is an election year,” Karpf added, “and the platforms are taking steps to make it harder to monitor how their services are used for malignant ends.”', 'Free Press, another media accountability organization that has been critical of Musk’s leadership of X and which called for advertisers to pause their spending on the platform shortly after his takeover, also celebrated Breyer’s ruling as potentially removing at least one hurdle that watchdog organizations face.', '“The guardrails for democracy are hanging by a thread and we have dwindling insights into platform practices as researchers face lawsuits, congressional subpoenas and other scare tactics,” said Nora Benavidez, senior counsel and director of digital rights at Free Press.', 'Ultimately, Benavidez called the ruling “a reminder that platform accountability is essential and will inevitably prevail when up against bullies like Musk who try to silence us.”']",0.0427064270235155,"Musk’s new playbook, Carusone said, enlists the help of sympathetic Republican attorneys general to investigate independent reporting organizations and tie them up in legal proceedings.","“This is an important decision that sees Elon Musk’s lawsuit for what it is — an effort to punish his critics for constitutionally protected speech and to deter researchers from studying his platform,” said Alex Abdo, litigation director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, which had filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case arguing that private companies should not be allowed to use breach of contract claims to punish criticism.",-0.3806276832308088,"Free Press, another media accountability organization that has been critical of Musk’s leadership of X and which called for advertisers to pause their spending on the platform shortly after his takeover, also celebrated Breyer’s ruling as potentially removing at least one hurdle that watchdog organizations face.","Researchers and civil society groups said the new subscription fees — costing up to $2.5 million a year —were “outrageously expensive” and made it impossible to do their work, reducing transparency of a critical platform.",2024-05-21 Apple announces its annual developers conference is set for June 10,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/tech/apple-annual-developers-conference-june-10/index.html," Updated 2:20 PM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","Apple announced its annual Worldwide Developer Conference will kick off on June 10, when the company is expected to show off its latest AI advancements. The conference, which is widely anticipated each year as a major showcase for Apple software news, will run Monday, June 10 through Friday, June 14. Although last year’s WWDC focused on the unveiling of the Vision Pro mixed reality headset, which launched in stores in February, this year is expected to turn to Apple’s AI efforts. The company is reportedly interested in licensing and building Google’s Gemini AI engine, which includes chatbots and other AI tools, into upcoming iPhones and its iOS 18 features. As more tech companies pour billions of dollars into the development and rollout of artificial intelligence, Apple has largely been left out of the conversation, with many other tech companies making big strides in the space. A partnership with Google would catapult Apple into the growing AI arms race. Apple researchers also recently said they’ve developed a family of multimodal models — which refers to an AI system that can interpret and generate different types of data, such as text and images at the same time — called MM1. A report from those researchers said those new methods boast “superior abilities” and can offer advanced reasoning and in-context learning to respond to text and images. In a press release on Tuesday, the company said WWDC 2024 will also share software updates coming to the iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, Apple TV and Vision Pro headset.",CNN,26/03/2024,"['Apple announced its annual Worldwide Developer Conference will kick off on June 10, when the company is expected to show off its latest AI advancements.', 'The conference, which is widely anticipated each year as a major showcase for Apple software news, will run Monday, June 10 through Friday, June 14.', 'Although last year’s WWDC focused on the unveiling of the Vision Pro mixed reality headset, which launched in stores in February, this year is expected to turn to Apple’s AI efforts.', 'The company is reportedly interested in licensing and building Google’s Gemini AI engine, which includes chatbots and other AI tools, into upcoming iPhones and its iOS 18 features.', 'As more tech companies pour billions of dollars into the development and rollout of artificial intelligence, Apple has largely been left out of the conversation, with many other tech companies making big strides in the space.', 'A partnership with Google would catapult Apple into the growing AI arms race.', 'Apple researchers also recently said they’ve developed a family of multimodal models — which refers to an AI system that can interpret and generate different types of data, such as text and images at the same time — called MM1.', 'A report from those researchers said those new methods boast “superior abilities” and can offer advanced reasoning and in-context learning to respond to text and images.', 'In a press release on Tuesday, the company said WWDC 2024 will also share software updates coming to the iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, Apple TV and Vision Pro headset.']",0.3259092919755588,A report from those researchers said those new methods boast “superior abilities” and can offer advanced reasoning and in-context learning to respond to text and images.,,0.9975101351737976,A report from those researchers said those new methods boast “superior abilities” and can offer advanced reasoning and in-context learning to respond to text and images.,,2024-05-21 British engineering giant Arup revealed as $25 million deepfake scam victim,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/16/tech/arup-deepfake-scam-loss-hong-kong-intl-hnk/index.html," Updated 4:53 AM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","A British multinational design and engineering company behind world-famous buildings such as the Sydney Opera House has confirmed that it was the target of a deepfake scam that led to one of its Hong Kong employees paying out $25 million to fraudsters. A spokesperson for London-based Arup told CNN on Friday that it notified Hong Kong police in January about the fraud incident, and confirmed that fake voices and images were used. “Unfortunately, we can’t go into details at this stage as the incident is still the subject of an ongoing investigation. However, we can confirm that fake voices and images were used,” the spokesperson said in an emailed statement. “Our financial stability and business operations were not affected and none of our internal systems were compromised,” the person added. Hong Kong police said in February that during the elaborate scam the employee, a finance worker, was duped into attending a video call with people he believed were the chief financial officer and other members of staff, but all of whom turned out to be deepfake re-creations. The authorities did not name the company or parties involved at the time. According to police, the worker had initially suspected he had received a phishing email from the company’s UK office, as it specified the need for a secret transaction to be carried out. However, the worker put aside his doubts after the video call because other people in attendance had looked and sounded just like colleagues he recognized. He subsequently agreed to send a total of 200 million Hong Kong dollars — about $25.6 million. The amount was sent across 15 transactions, Hong Kong public broadcaster RTHK reported, citing police. “Deepfake” normally refers to fake videos that have been created using artificial intelligence (AI) and look extremely realistic. Earlier this year, pornographic AI-generated images of pop star Taylor Swift spread across social media, underscoring the damaging potential posed by AI technology. As a top engineering consulting firm, Arup has 18,500 employees across 34 offices around the world. It was responsible for landmarks such as the Bird’s Nest stadium, site of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games. “Like many other businesses around the globe, our operations are subject to regular attacks, including invoice fraud, phishing scams, WhatsApp voice spoofing, and deepfakes. What we have seen is that the number and sophistication of these attacks has been rising sharply in recent months,” Rob Greig, Arup’s global chief information officer, said in the emailed statement. Authorities around the world are growing increasingly concerned about the sophistication of deepfake technology and the nefarious uses it can be put to. In an internal memo seen by CNN, Arup’s East Asia regional chairman, Michael Kwok, said the “frequency and sophistication of these attacks are rapidly increasing globally, and we all have a duty to stay informed and alert about how to spot different techniques used by scammers.” Kwok returned to the role earlier this month, replacing Andy Lee, who announced his departure from Arup on his LinkedIn page about a week ago after 26 years at the company. This story has been updated with additional information.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['A British multinational design and engineering company behind world-famous buildings such as the Sydney Opera House has confirmed that it was the target of a deepfake scam that led to one of its Hong Kong employees paying out $25 million to fraudsters.', 'A spokesperson for London-based Arup told CNN on Friday that it notified Hong Kong police in January about the fraud incident, and confirmed that fake voices and images were used.', '“Unfortunately, we can’t go into details at this stage as the incident is still the subject of an ongoing investigation.', 'However, we can confirm that fake voices and images were used,” the spokesperson said in an emailed statement.', '“Our financial stability and business operations were not affected and none of our internal systems were compromised,” the person added.', 'Hong Kong police said in February that during the elaborate scam the employee, a finance worker, was duped into attending a video call with people he believed were the chief financial officer and other members of staff, but all of whom turned out to be deepfake re-creations.', 'The authorities did not name the company or parties involved at the time.', 'According to police, the worker had initially suspected he had received a phishing email from the company’s UK office, as it specified the need for a secret transaction to be carried out.', 'However, the worker put aside his doubts after the video call because other people in attendance had looked and sounded just like colleagues he recognized.', 'He subsequently agreed to send a total of 200 million Hong Kong dollars — about $25.6 million.', 'The amount was sent across 15 transactions, Hong Kong public broadcaster RTHK reported, citing police.', '“Deepfake” normally refers to fake videos that have been created using artificial intelligence (AI) and look extremely realistic.', 'Earlier this year, pornographic AI-generated images of pop starTaylor Swiftspread across social media, underscoring the damaging potential posed by AI technology.', 'As a top engineering consulting firm, Arup has 18,500 employees across 34 offices around the world.', 'It was responsible for landmarks such as the Bird’s Nest stadium, site of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.', '“Like many other businesses around the globe, our operations are subject to regular attacks, including invoice fraud, phishing scams, WhatsApp voice spoofing, and deepfakes.', 'What we have seen is that the number and sophistication of these attacks has been rising sharply in recent months,” Rob Greig, Arup’s global chief information officer, said in the emailed statement.', 'Authorities around the world are growing increasingly concerned about the sophistication of deepfake technology and the nefarious uses it can be put to.', 'In an internal memo seen by CNN, Arup’s East Asia regional chairman, Michael Kwok, said the “frequency and sophistication of these attacks are rapidly increasing globally, and we all have a duty to stay informed and alert about how to spot different techniques used by scammers.”', 'Kwok returned to the role earlier this month, replacing Andy Lee, who announced his departure from Arup on his LinkedIn page about a week ago after 26 years at the company.', 'This story has been updated with additional information.']",-0.1444921112736466,The authorities did not name the company or parties involved at the time.,"“Like many other businesses around the globe, our operations are subject to regular attacks, including invoice fraud, phishing scams, WhatsApp voice spoofing, and deepfakes.",-0.2922703176736831,"What we have seen is that the number and sophistication of these attacks has been rising sharply in recent months,” Rob Greig, Arup’s global chief information officer, said in the emailed statement.","Earlier this year, pornographic AI-generated images of pop starTaylor Swiftspread across social media, underscoring the damaging potential posed by AI technology.",2024-05-21 Electricity grids creak as AI demands soar,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cj5ll89dy2mo,2024-05-21T01:03:48.722Z,"There’s a big problem with generative AI, says Sasha Luccioni at Hugging Face, a machine-learning company. Generative AI is an energy hog. “Every time you query the model, the whole thing gets activated, so it’s wildly inefficient from a computational perspective,” she says. Take the Large Language Models (LLMs) at the heart of many Generative AI systems. They have been trained on vast stores of written information, which helps them to churn out text in response to practically any query. “When you use Generative AI… it’s generating content from scratch, it’s essentially making up answers,” Dr Luccioni explains. That means the computer has to work pretty hard. A Generative AI system might use around 33 times more energy than machines running task-specific software, according to a recent study by Dr Luccioni and colleagues. The work has been peer-reviewed but is yet to be published in a journal. It’s not your personal computer that uses all this energy, though. Or your smartphone. The computations we increasingly rely on happen in giant data centres that are, for most people, out of sight and out of mind. “The cloud,” says Dr Luccioni. “You don’t think about these huge boxes of metal that heat up and use so much energy.” The world’s data centres are using ever more electricity. In 2022, they gobbled up 460 terawatt hours of electricity, and the International Energy Agency (IEA) expects this to double in just four years. Data centres could be using a total of 1,000 terawatts hours annually by 2026. “This demand is roughly equivalent to the electricity consumption of Japan,” says the IEA. Japan has a population of 125 million people. At data centres, huge volumes of information are stored for retrieval anywhere in the world – everything from your emails to Hollywood movies. The computers in those faceless buildings also power AI and cryptocurrency. They underpin life as we know it. But some countries know all too well how energy hungry these facilities are. There is currently a moratorium preventing the construction of new data centres in Dublin. Nearly a fifth of Ireland’s electricity is used up by data centres, and this figure is expected to grow significantly in the next few years – meanwhile Irish households are reducing their consumption. The boss of National Grid said in a speech in March that data centre electricity demand in the UK will rise six-fold in just 10 years, fuelled largely by the rise of AI. National Grid expects that the energy required for electrifying transport and heat will be much larger in total, however. Utilities firms in the US are beginning to feel the pressure, says Chris Seiple at Wood Mackenzie, a consultancy. “They’re getting hit with data centre demands at the exact same time as we have a renaissance taking place – thanks to government policy – in domestic manufacturing,” he explains. Lawmakers in some states are now rethinking tax breaks offered to data centre developers because of the sheer strain these facilities are putting on local energy infrastructure, according to reports in the US. Mr Seiple says there is a “land grab” going on for data centre locations near to power stations or renewable energy hubs: “Iowa is a hotbed of data centre development, there’s a lot of wind generation there.” Some data centres can afford to go to more remote locations these days because latency – the delay, usually measured in milliseconds, between sending information out from a data centre and the user receiving it – is not a major concern for increasingly popular Generative AI systems. In the past, data centres handling emergency communications or financial trading algorithms, for example, have been sited within or very near to large population centres, for the absolute best response times. There is little doubt that the energy demands of data centres will rise in the coming years, but there is huge uncertainty over how much, stresses Mr Seiple. Part of that uncertainty is down to the fact that the hardware behind generative AI is evolving all the time. Tony Grayson is general manager at Compass Quantum, a data-centre business, and he points to Nvidia’s recently launched Grace Blackwell supercomputer chips (named after a computer scientist and a mathematician), which are designed specifically to power high-end processes including generative AI, quantum computing and computer-aided drug design. Nvidia says that, in the future, a company could train AIs several times larger than the largest AI systems currently available in 90 days using 8,000 of the previous generation of Nvidia chips. This would need a 15 megawatt electricity supply. But the same work could be carried out in the same time by just 2,000 Grace Blackwell chips, and they would need a four megawatt supply, according to Nvidia. That still ends up as 8.6 gigawatt hours of electricity consumed – roughly the same amount that the entire city of Belfast uses in a week. “The performance is going up so much that your overall energy savings are big,” says Mr Grayson. But he agrees that power demands are shaping where data centre operators site their facilities: “People are going to where cheap power’s at.” Dr Luccioni notes that the energy and resources required to manufacture the latest computer chips are significant. Still, it is true that data centres have got more energy efficient over time, argues Dale Sartor, a consultant and affiliate of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in the US. Their efficiency is often measured in terms of power usage effectiveness, or PUE. The lower the number, the better. State-of-the-art data centres have a PUE of around 1.1, he notes. These facilities do still create significant amounts of waste heat and Europe is ahead of the US in finding ways of using that waste heat – such as warming up swimming pools – says Mr Sartor. Bruce Owen, UK managing director at Equinix, a data centre firm, says, “I still think that the demand is going to grow further than that efficiency gain that we see.” He predicts that more data centres will be built with on-site power-generating facilities included. Equinix was denied planning permission for a gas-powered data centre in Dublin last year. Mr Sartor adds that costs may ultimately determine whether Generative AI is worth it for certain applications: “If the old way is cheaper and easier then there’s not going to be much of a market for the new way.” Dr Luccioni stresses, though, that people will need to clearly understand how the options in front of them differ in terms of energy efficiency. She is working on a project to develop energy ratings for AI. “Instead of picking this GPT-derivative model that is very clunky and uses a lot of energy, you can pick this A+ energy star model that will be a lot more lightweight and efficient,” she says. ",BBC,21/05/2024,"['There’s a big problem with generative AI, says Sasha Luccioni at Hugging Face, a machine-learning company.', 'Generative AI is an energy hog. “', 'Every time you query the model, the whole thing gets activated, so it’s wildly inefficient from a computational perspective,” she says.', 'Take the Large Language Models (LLMs) at the heart of many Generative AI systems.', 'They have been trained on vast stores of written information, which helps them to churn out text in response to practically any query. “', 'When you use Generative AI… it’s generating content from scratch, it’s essentially making up answers,” Dr Luccioni explains.', 'That means the computer has to work pretty hard.', 'A Generative AI system might use around 33 times more energy than machines running task-specific software, according to a recent study by Dr Luccioni and colleagues.', 'The work has been peer-reviewed but is yet to be published in a journal.', 'It’s not your personal computer that uses all this energy, though.', 'Or your smartphone.', 'The computations we increasingly rely on happen in giant data centres that are, for most people, out of sight and out of mind. “', 'The cloud,” says Dr Luccioni. “', 'You don’t think about these huge boxes of metal that heat up and use so much energy.”', 'The world’s data centres are using ever more electricity.', 'In 2022, they gobbled up 460 terawatt hours of electricity, and the International Energy Agency (IEA) expects this to double in just four years.', 'Data centres could be using a total of 1,000 terawatts hours annually by 2026. “', 'This demand is roughly equivalent to the electricity consumption of Japan,” says the IEA.', 'Japan has a population of 125 million people.', 'At data centres, huge volumes of information are stored for retrieval anywhere in the world – everything from your emails to Hollywood movies.', 'The computers in those faceless buildings also power AI and cryptocurrency.', 'They underpin life as we know it.', 'But some countries know all too well how energy hungry these facilities are.', 'There is currently a moratorium preventing the construction of new data centres in Dublin.', 'Nearly a fifth of Ireland’s electricity is used up by data centres, and this figure is expected to grow significantly in the next few years – meanwhile Irish households are reducing their consumption.', 'The boss of National Grid said in a speech in March that data centre electricity demand in the UK will rise six-fold in just 10 years, fuelled largely by the rise of AI.', 'National Grid expects that the energy required for electrifying transport and heat will be much larger in total, however.', 'Utilities firms in the US are beginning to feel the pressure, says Chris Seiple at Wood Mackenzie, a consultancy. “', 'They’re getting hit with data centre demands at the exact same time as we have a renaissance taking place – thanks to government policy – in domestic manufacturing,” he explains.', 'Lawmakers in some states are now rethinking tax breaks offered to data centre developers because of the sheer strain these facilities are putting on local energy infrastructure, according to reports in the US.', 'Mr Seiple says there is a “land grab” going on for data centre locations near to power stations or renewable energy hubs: “Iowa is a hotbed of data centre development, there’s a lot of wind generation there.”', 'Some data centres can afford to go to more remote locations these days because latency – the delay, usually measured in milliseconds, between sending information out from a data centre and the user receiving it – is not a major concern for increasingly popular Generative AI systems.', 'In the past, data centres handling emergency communications or financial trading algorithms, for example, have been sited within or very near to large population centres, for the absolute best response times.', 'There is little doubt that the energy demands of data centres will rise in the coming years, but there is huge uncertainty over how much, stresses Mr Seiple.', 'Part of that uncertainty is down to the fact that the hardware behind generative AI is evolving all the time.', 'Tony Grayson is general manager at Compass Quantum, a data-centre business, and he points to Nvidia’s recently launched Grace Blackwell supercomputer chips (named after a computer scientist and a mathematician), which are designed specifically to power high-end processes including generative AI, quantum computing and computer-aided drug design.', 'Nvidia says that, in the future, a company could train AIs several times larger than the largest AI systems currently available in 90 days using 8,000 of the previous generation of Nvidia chips.', 'This would need a 15 megawatt electricity supply.', 'But the same work could be carried out in the same time by just 2,000 Grace Blackwell chips, and they would need a four megawatt supply, according to Nvidia.', 'That still ends up as 8.6 gigawatt hours of electricity consumed – roughly the same amount that the entire city of Belfast uses in a week. “', 'The performance is going up so much that your overall energy savings are big,” says Mr Grayson.', 'But he agrees that power demands are shaping where data centre operators site their facilities: “People are going to where cheap power’s at.”', 'Dr Luccioni notes that the energy and resources required to manufacture the latest computer chips are significant.', 'Still, it is true that data centres have got more energy efficient over time, argues Dale Sartor, a consultant and affiliate of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in the US.', 'Their efficiency is often measured in terms of power usage effectiveness, or PUE.', 'The lower the number, the better.', 'State-of-the-art data centres have a PUE of around 1.1, he notes.', 'These facilities do still create significant amounts of waste heat and Europe is ahead of the US in finding ways of using that waste heat – such as warming up swimming pools – says Mr Sartor.', 'Bruce Owen, UK managing director at Equinix, a data centre firm, says, “I still think that the demand is going to grow further than that efficiency gain that we see.”', 'He predicts that more data centres will be built with on-site power-generating facilities included.', 'Equinix was denied planning permission for a gas-powered data centre in Dublin last year.', 'Mr Sartor adds that costs may ultimately determine whether Generative AI is worth it for certain applications: “If the old way is cheaper and easier then there’s not going to be much of a market for the new way.”', 'Dr Luccioni stresses, though, that people will need to clearly understand how the options in front of them differ in terms of energy efficiency.', 'She is working on a project to develop energy ratings for AI. “', 'Instead of picking this GPT-derivative model that is very clunky and uses a lot of energy, you can pick this A+ energy star model that will be a lot more lightweight and efficient,” she says.']",0.1682239152310992,"Instead of picking this GPT-derivative model that is very clunky and uses a lot of energy, you can pick this A+ energy star model that will be a lot more lightweight and efficient,” she says.","There is little doubt that the energy demands of data centres will rise in the coming years, but there is huge uncertainty over how much, stresses Mr Seiple.",0.2879800753934042,"The performance is going up so much that your overall energy savings are big,” says Mr Grayson.","Every time you query the model, the whole thing gets activated, so it’s wildly inefficient from a computational perspective,” she says.",2024-05-21 "NBC cut ties with Ronna McDaniel after extraordinary pressure, but its problems aren’t over",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/27/media/nbc-ronna-mcdaniel-problems-are-not-over/index.html," Updated 8:16 AM EDT, Wed March 27, 2024 ","Only 80 hours elapsed between NBC News announcing Ronna McDaniel as a paid contributor and the network ousting her from that very role. But for the leadership at NBC Universal News Group, those were 80 painful hours. On Tuesday evening, following another full day in which the media rumor mill churned at warp speed, NBCU News Group boss Cesar Conde sent staff a memo, notifying his troops that he had reversed his decision to welcome the former Republican National Committee chair to “the team.” “After listening to the legitimate concerns of many of you, I have decided that Ronna McDaniel will not be an NBC News contributor,” Conde said, adding that he wanted to “personally apologize to our team members who felt we let them down.” Conde had no real choice. The embattled NBCU boss, who I’m told dealt with the crisis from an unknown location outside of 30 Rock, was facing an unprecedented rebellion from his most high-profile stars, who one by one went on the air and excoriated leadership’s decision to hire McDaniel. The only aspect of Conde’s note that was surprising was the fact that it came 48 hours late, allowing what started off as a crisis to fester and balloon into one of the worst corporate public relations calamities in recent memory. “What a sh*t show!” a media executive exclaimed to me Tuesday shortly after Conde relieved McDaniel of her NBC News credentials. In his note, Conde said he took “full responsibility” for McDaniel’s hire. But, he also did point the finger, telling staffers that hiring her was “a collective recommendation by some members of our leadership team.” Indeed, multiple people familiar with the matter have told me that the infighting among NBC executives over who was at fault for the disaster has reached a fever pitch, with various factions of the NBCU News Group assigning blame to others. Regardless of who is to blame, the entire affair made clear who is actually in control of the company — and it’s not Conde & Co. Despite the NBCU C-suite digging their heels in the sand as they resisted dumping McDaniel for days, they were ultimately forced to succumb to pressure from their talent. As a second media executive commented to me, it is now “very clear who is in charge” after the “weak leadership was put on full display.” “Has Cesar lost the room?” wondered a third media executive. While the Peacock family argues over who was really at fault, the company is facing a fresh public relations mess. Led by Donald Trump, right-wing personalities are already assailing the network as being overrun with intolerant woke leftists. “These Radical Left Lunatics are CRAZY and the top people at NBC ARE WEAK,” Trump raged on his Truth Social platform. Ari Fleischer, who served as press secretary under President George W. Bush, wrote on X: “What NBC is saying is if you’re for Trump, you don’t belong. Good. Let NBC be for Democrats only.” Of course, that narrative is intellectually dishonest. The objection to McDaniel from both within and outside of NBCU was not that she is a Republican. It wasn’t even that she was a Trump-supporting Republican. No, the objection stemmed from the fact that McDaniel was an active participant in the plot to subvert the 2020 vote. And, in addition to that disgraceful history, she had a lengthy track record smearing NBC News and MSNBC. Nevertheless, NBCU will now have to contend with such dishonest attacks being leveled by the right, which will follow them in the days, months, and even years to come. As unfair as it may be, they will certainly damage the network’s brand in Republican circles — a place it had gone through great pains to appeal to. NBCU will also have to grapple with McDaniel, who spent the last 24 hours or so interviewing lawyers as she gears up for a possible legal fight with the network, according to a person familiar with the matter. The rift between McDaniel and NBCU had grown to such an extent by Tuesday that she was not informed by network brass that she had been dismissed, I’m told. Instead, McDaniel learned of her ouster in press reports. While NBCU is being beaten up on the right, the company’s leadership was quickly praised by its journalists and top stars. Shortly after Conde sent out his memo, Rachel Maddow appeared on Joy Reid’s show, where the two lauded Conde for reversing course. “I think it is a show of strength and a show of respect for the people who work at this company and make us who we are,” Maddow said. “That leadership was willing to change on this, I’m grateful to them.”",CNN,27/03/2024,"['Only 80 hours elapsed between NBC News announcing Ronna McDaniel as a paid contributor and the network ousting her from that very role.', 'But for the leadership at NBC Universal News Group, those were 80painful hours.', 'On Tuesday evening, following another full day in which the media rumor mill churned at warp speed, NBCU News Group boss Cesar Conde sent staff a memo, notifying his troops that he had reversed his decision to welcome the former Republican National Committee chair to “the team.”', '“After listening to the legitimate concerns of many of you, I have decided that Ronna McDaniel will not be an NBC News contributor,” Conde said, adding that he wanted to “personally apologize to our team members who felt we let them down.”', 'Conde had no real choice.', 'The embattled NBCU boss, who I’m told dealt with the crisis from an unknown location outside of 30 Rock, was facing an unprecedented rebellion from his most high-profile stars, who one by one went on the air and excoriated leadership’s decision to hire McDaniel.', 'The only aspect of Conde’s note that was surprising was the fact that it came 48 hours late, allowing what started off as a crisis to fester and balloon into one of the worst corporate public relations calamities in recent memory.', '“What a sh*t show!”', 'a media executive exclaimed to me Tuesday shortly after Conde relieved McDaniel of her NBC News credentials.', 'In his note, Conde said he took “full responsibility” for McDaniel’s hire.', 'But, he also did point the finger, telling staffers that hiring her was “a collective recommendation by some members of our leadership team.”', 'Indeed, multiple people familiar with the matter have told me that the infighting among NBC executives over who was at fault for the disaster has reached a fever pitch, with various factions of the NBCU News Group assigning blame to others.', 'Regardless of who is to blame, the entire affair made clear who is actually in control of the company — and it’s not Conde & Co. Despite the NBCU C-suite digging their heels in the sand as they resisted dumping McDaniel for days, they were ultimately forced to succumb to pressure from their talent.', 'As a second media executive commented to me, it is now “very clear who is in charge” after the “weak leadership was put on full display.”', '“Has Cesar lost the room?”', 'wondered a third media executive.', 'While the Peacock family argues over who was really at fault, the company is facing a fresh public relations mess.', 'Led by Donald Trump, right-wing personalities are already assailing the network as being overrun with intolerant woke leftists.', '“These Radical Left Lunatics are CRAZY and the top people at NBC ARE WEAK,” Trump raged on his Truth Social platform.', 'Ari Fleischer, who served as press secretary under President George W. Bush, wrote on X: “What NBC is saying is if you’re for Trump, you don’t belong.', 'Good.', 'Let NBC be for Democrats only.”', 'Of course, that narrative is intellectually dishonest.', 'The objection to McDaniel from both within and outside of NBCU was not that she is a Republican.', 'It wasn’t even that she was a Trump-supporting Republican.', 'No, the objection stemmed from the fact that McDaniel was an active participant in the plot to subvert the 2020 vote.', 'And, in addition to that disgraceful history, she had a lengthy track record smearing NBC News and MSNBC.', 'Nevertheless, NBCU will now have to contend with such dishonest attacks being leveled by the right, which will follow them in the days, months, and even years to come.', 'As unfair as it may be, they will certainly damage the network’s brand in Republican circles — a place it had gone through great pains to appeal to.', 'NBCU will also have to grapple with McDaniel, who spent the last 24 hours or so interviewing lawyers as she gears up for a possible legal fight with the network, according to a person familiar with the matter.', 'The rift between McDaniel and NBCU had grown to such an extent by Tuesday that she was not informed by network brass that she had been dismissed, I’m told.', 'Instead, McDaniel learned of her ouster in press reports.', 'While NBCU is being beaten up on the right, the company’s leadership was quickly praised by its journalists and top stars.', 'Shortly after Conde sent out his memo, Rachel Maddow appeared on Joy Reid’s show, where the two lauded Conde for reversing course.', '“I think it is a show of strength and a show of respect for the people who work at this company and make us who we are,” Maddow said. “', 'That leadership was willing to change on this, I’m grateful to them.”']",-0.0743400881523301,"“I think it is a show of strength and a show of respect for the people who work at this company and make us who we are,” Maddow said. “","“These Radical Left Lunatics are CRAZY and the top people at NBC ARE WEAK,” Trump raged on his Truth Social platform.",-0.3914040706374428,"While NBCU is being beaten up on the right, the company’s leadership was quickly praised by its journalists and top stars.","As unfair as it may be, they will certainly damage the network’s brand in Republican circles — a place it had gone through great pains to appeal to.",2024-05-21 Billionaires Jamie Dimon and Ray Dalio sound the alarm on soaring US government debt,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/16/business/jamie-dimon-ray-dalio-us-government-debt/index.html," Updated 10:55 AM EDT, Thu May 16, 2024 ","The chorus of voices warning about the dangers of record US government debt is growing louder. In the past 24 hours, JPMorgan (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon and Ray Dalio, founder of the world’s biggest hedge fund, have weighed in with concerns about America’s debt pile. In an interview with Sky News Wednesday, Dimon said he hoped the US government would focus on reducing its budget deficit — the difference between what it spends and what it receives in taxes each year — before financial markets force it to. “The sooner we focus on it, the better,” Dimon added. “At one point, it will cause a problem… the problem will be caused by the market, and then you’ll be forced to deal with it and probably in a far more uncomfortable way than if you dealt with it to start.” Yawning deficits are adding to the overall level of US government debt because they require the Treasury to issue more bonds to plug the gap. Dalio said he was anxious about waning investor appetite for those government bonds, known as Treasuries. “I’m… concerned about the softening demand to meet supply, particularly from international buyers worried about the US debt picture and possible sanctions (against countries other than Russia),” he told the Financial Times. If investors become wary, they may demand higher returns — or yields — to own Treasuries — a risk already flagged by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) — and that in turn could mean higher borrowing costs across the US economy. The comments by Dimon and Dalio reflect widespread concerns about the broader risks of the huge US government debt burden, which the Treasury Department puts at $34.6 trillion, bigger than the size of the US economy. Dimon acknowledged that debt-fueled government spending, including pandemic stimulus, had been one of the reasons behind robust growth in the world’s biggest economy. “America spent a lot of money, during Covid and after Covid. Our deficit (is at) 6% now, that’s a lot, but obviously that drives growth,” he said. The spending spree has also raised consumer price inflation. “Any country can borrow money and drive some growth but it may not always lead to good growth, so I think America should be quite aware that we’ve got to focus on our fiscal deficit issues a little bit more and that is important for the world,” Dimon commented. Last month, the IMF said the high and rising level of US government debt risked driving up borrowing costs around the world and undermining global financial stability. That warning followed an even blunter message from the head of the CBO, the US Congress’s independent fiscal watchdog, who said the United States risked a bond market crisis of the kind that engulfed the United Kingdom under former Prime Minister Liz Truss. In that instance, investors effectively rejected the UK government’s plan to pay for extra spending and tax cuts by borrowing more money, leading to a selloff in UK government bonds. There is already some evidence that investors are demanding higher returns to hold US Treasuries, according to the IMF, partly as a result of their concerns about the debt trajectory. According to the Treasury Department, the federal government has so far spent $855 billion more than it has collected in the 2024 fiscal year, which began on October 1. Debt servicing costs have also soared, on the back of higher official interest rates, leaving less money for public services. In fiscal year 2023, the US government spent more to service its debt than it did on each of housing, transport and higher education, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a non-profit. The United States is far from alone in increasingly living beyond its means. The European Central Bank expects government debt in the 20 countries that use the euro to stay higher than before the pandemic. This will make European governments “more vulnerable to adverse shocks,” such as growing geopolitical tensions if they require more spending on defense, it said in a report Thursday. Olesya Dmitracova contributed to this article, which has been updated with additional information.",CNN,16/05/2024,"['The chorus of voices warning about the dangers of record US government debt is growing louder.', 'In the past 24 hours, JPMorgan (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon and Ray Dalio, founder of the world’s biggest hedge fund, have weighed in with concerns about America’s debt pile.', 'In an interview with Sky News Wednesday, Dimon said he hoped the US government would focus on reducing its budget deficit — the difference between what it spends and what it receives in taxes each year — before financial markets force it to.', '“The sooner we focus on it, the better,” Dimon added. “', 'At one point, it will cause a problem… the problem will be caused by the market, and then you’ll be forced to deal with it and probably in a far more uncomfortable way than if you dealt with it to start.”', 'Yawning deficits are adding to the overall level of US government debt because they require the Treasury to issue more bonds to plug the gap.', 'Dalio said he was anxious about waning investor appetite for those government bonds, known as Treasuries. “', 'I’m… concerned about the softening demand to meet supply, particularly from international buyers worried about the US debt picture and possible sanctions (against countries other than Russia),” he told the Financial Times.', 'If investors become wary, they may demand higher returns — or yields — to own Treasuries — a risk already flagged by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) — and that in turn could mean higher borrowing costs across the US economy.', 'The comments by Dimon and Dalio reflect widespread concerns about the broader risks of the huge US government debt burden, which the Treasury Department puts at $34.6 trillion, bigger than the size of the US economy.', 'Dimon acknowledged that debt-fueled government spending, including pandemic stimulus, had been one of the reasons behind robust growth in the world’s biggest economy.', '“America spent a lot of money, during Covid and after Covid.', 'Our deficit (is at) 6% now, that’s a lot, but obviously that drives growth,” he said.', 'The spending spree has also raised consumer price inflation.', '“Any country can borrow money and drive some growth but it may not always lead to good growth, so I think America should be quite aware that we’ve got to focus on our fiscal deficit issues a little bit more and that is important for the world,” Dimon commented.', 'Last month, the IMF said the high and rising level of US government debt risked driving up borrowing costs around the world and undermining global financial stability.', 'That warning followed an even blunter message from the head of the CBO, the US Congress’s independent fiscal watchdog, who said the United States risked a bond market crisis of the kind that engulfed the United Kingdom under former Prime Minister Liz Truss.', 'In that instance, investors effectively rejected the UK government’s plan to pay for extra spending and tax cuts by borrowing more money, leading to a selloff in UK government bonds.', 'There is already some evidence that investors are demanding higher returns to hold US Treasuries, according to the IMF, partly as a result of their concerns about the debt trajectory.', 'According to the Treasury Department, the federal government has so far spent $855 billion more than it has collected in the 2024 fiscal year, which began on October 1.', 'Debt servicing costs have also soared, on the back of higher official interest rates, leaving less money for public services.', 'In fiscal year 2023, the US government spent more to service its debt than it did on each of housing, transport and higher education, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a non-profit.', 'The United States is far from alone in increasingly living beyond its means.', 'The European Central Bank expects government debt in the 20 countries that use the euro to stay higher than before the pandemic.', 'This will make European governments “more vulnerable to adverse shocks,” such as growing geopolitical tensions if they require more spending on defense, it said in a report Thursday.', 'Olesya Dmitracova contributed to this article, which has been updated with additional information.']",-0.1231538157865702,"“Any country can borrow money and drive some growth but it may not always lead to good growth, so I think America should be quite aware that we’ve got to focus on our fiscal deficit issues a little bit more and that is important for the world,” Dimon commented.","At one point, it will cause a problem… the problem will be caused by the market, and then you’ll be forced to deal with it and probably in a far more uncomfortable way than if you dealt with it to start.”",-0.3897259881099065,"Dimon acknowledged that debt-fueled government spending, including pandemic stimulus, had been one of the reasons behind robust growth in the world’s biggest economy.","In that instance, investors effectively rejected the UK government’s plan to pay for extra spending and tax cuts by borrowing more money, leading to a selloff in UK government bonds.",2024-05-21 "Israel cancels order to cut AP live feed, will return camera equipment it seized",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/21/media/israel-gaza-live-camera-shut-down/index.html," Updated 3:50 PM EDT, Tue May 21, 2024 ","Israel said it will return to the Associated Press news agency camera equipment that it confiscated in Sderot earlier on Tuesday that showed live pictures of Israel’s border with the Gaza Strip. In a statement late Tuesday, Israel’s Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi said that he has “now ordered to cancel the operation and return the equipment” to the AP news agency, because “Israel’s Ministry of Defense wishes to examine the matter of the broadcasts from these locations in Sderot regarding the risk to our forces.” Earlier, the Associated Press on Tuesday said Israeli authorities had shut down its live camera feed showing Gaza and seized its equipment in what it decried as an “abusive use by the Israeli government of the country’s new foreign broadcasters law.” “The Associated Press decries in the strongest terms the actions of the Israeli government,” the non-profit news collective said in a statement. “We urge the Israeli authorities to return our equipment and enable us to reinstate our live feed immediately so we can continue to provide this important visual journalism to thousands of media outlets around the world.” The Israeli military regularly classifies areas around Gaza as “closed military zones,” restricting movement there. The AP’s live feed provided a view of actions in Gaza, where no independent journalists are able to operate because of Israeli and Egyptian restrictions on entry to the strip. The White House urged Israel to reverse its decision, telling CNN that it had “concerns” over the action. “We’ve been engaging directly with the government of Israel to express our concerns over this action and to ask them to reverse it,” according to a White House spokesperson. The Associated Press did not immediately respond to a CNN request for comment, but the Foreign Press Association did voice its alarm about the shutdown and confiscation. “Israel’s move today is a slippery slope. Israel could block other international news agencies from providing live footage of Gaza. It also could allow Israel to block media coverage of virtually any news event on vague security grounds,” the FPA said in a statement. The move comes weeks after Israel shut down Al Jazeera’s operations in the country, raiding the news outlet’s offices and seizing its communication equipment, prompting swift condemnation from the United Nations and rights groups over Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s moves to restrict press freedoms. The law approved by Israel’s parliament last month gives the prime minister and the communications minister the authority to “temporarily” order the closure of foreign networks operating in Israel that are deemed a threat to national security. News organizations could be banned for a 45-day period, although the government can renew the ban for additional 45-day periods. The law itself is also technically temporary and will expire on July 31 or earlier if an emergency declaration due to the war is canceled. Several legal challenges to the law are pending in Israeli courts. The Israeli Supreme Court recently declined to issue an emergency injunction against the law filed by The Association for Civil Rights in Israel. The group said in its petition filed in early April that the law “violates freedom of expression, the right to information and freedom of the press,” and “tramples on the principles of the rule of law and the independence of the judiciary, since it includes an “override clause” that prevents the court from overturning an illegal decision.” Another legal challenge has been filed in the Tel Aviv District Court. In an earlier statement, Karhi had accused the AP of violating its new law by providing a feed to its thousands of news clients, including Al Jazeera. The confiscated equipment included a camera, tripod, two microphones and transmission equipment, the statement said. The press freedom group Reporters Without Borders condemned Israel’s decision to seize the equipment. “After having banned Al Jazeera, Israel is lashing out at the AP,” it said in a statement. “RSF denounces the seizure of the news outlet’s camera and the interruption of the continuous feed that films Gaza under the pretext that these images are supplying, among others, Al Jazeera.” Israel opposition leader Yair Lapid also denounced the seizure as “an act of madness.” “This is not Al Jazeera, this is an American media outlet that has won 53 Pulitzer Prizes,” he said in a statement. “This government behaves as if it has decided to make sure at any cost that Israel will be outcast all over the world. They went mad.”",CNN,21/05/2024,"['Israel said it will return to the Associated Press news agency camera equipment that it confiscated in Sderot earlier on Tuesday that showed live pictures of Israel’s border with the Gaza Strip.', 'In a statement late Tuesday, Israel’s Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi said that he has “now ordered to cancel the operation and return the equipment” to the AP news agency, because “Israel’s Ministry of Defense wishes to examine the matter of the broadcasts from these locations in Sderot regarding the risk to our forces.”', 'Earlier, the Associated Press on Tuesday said Israeli authorities had shut down its live camera feed showing Gaza and seized its equipment in what it decried as an “abusive use by the Israeli government of the country’s new foreign broadcasters law.”', '“The Associated Press decries in the strongest terms the actions of the Israeli government,” the non-profit news collective said in a statement. “', 'We urge the Israeli authorities to return our equipment and enable us to reinstate our live feed immediately so we can continue to provide this important visual journalism to thousands of media outlets around the world.”', 'The Israeli military regularly classifies areas around Gaza as “closed military zones,” restricting movement there.', 'The AP’s live feed provided a view of actions in Gaza, where no independent journalists are able to operate because of Israeli and Egyptian restrictions on entry to the strip.', 'The White House urged Israel to reverse its decision, telling CNN that it had “concerns” over the action.', '“We’ve been engaging directly with the government of Israel to express our concerns over this action and to ask them to reverse it,” according to a White House spokesperson.', 'The Associated Press did not immediately respond to a CNN request for comment, but the Foreign Press Association did voice its alarm about the shutdown and confiscation.', '“Israel’s move today is a slippery slope.', 'Israel could block other international news agencies from providing live footage of Gaza.', 'It also could allow Israel to block media coverage of virtually any news event on vague security grounds,” the FPA said in a statement.', 'The move comes weeks afterIsrael shut down Al Jazeera’s operationsin the country, raiding the news outlet’s offices and seizing its communication equipment, prompting swift condemnation from the United Nations and rights groups over Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s moves to restrict press freedoms.', 'The law approved by Israel’s parliament last month gives the prime minister and the communications minister the authority to “temporarily” order the closure of foreign networks operating in Israel that are deemed a threat to national security.', 'News organizations could be banned for a 45-day period, although the government can renew the ban for additional 45-day periods.', 'The law itself is also technically temporary and will expire on July 31 or earlier if an emergency declaration due to the war is canceled.', 'Several legal challenges to the law are pending in Israeli courts.', 'The Israeli Supreme Court recently declined to issue an emergency injunction against the law filed by The Association for Civil Rights in Israel.', 'The group said in its petition filed in early April that the law “violates freedom of expression, the right to information and freedom of the press,” and “tramples on the principles of the rule of law and the independence of the judiciary, since it includes an “override clause” that prevents the court from overturning an illegal decision.”', 'Another legal challenge has been filed in the Tel Aviv District Court.', 'In an earlier statement, Karhi had accused the AP of violating its new law by providing a feed to its thousands of news clients, including Al Jazeera.', 'The confiscated equipment included a camera, tripod, two microphones and transmission equipment, the statement said.', 'The press freedom group Reporters Without Borders condemned Israel’s decision to seize the equipment.', '“After having banned Al Jazeera, Israel is lashing out at the AP,” it said in a statement. “', 'RSF denounces the seizure of the news outlet’s camera and the interruption of the continuous feed that films Gaza under the pretext that these images are supplying, among others, Al Jazeera.”', 'Israel opposition leader Yair Lapid also denounced the seizure as “an act of madness.”', '“This is not Al Jazeera, this is an American media outlet that has won 53 Pulitzer Prizes,” he said in a statement. “', 'This government behaves as if it has decided to make sure at any cost that Israel will be outcast all over the world.', 'They went mad.”']",-0.0810224998418425,"“This is not Al Jazeera, this is an American media outlet that has won 53 Pulitzer Prizes,” he said in a statement. “","News organizations could be banned for a 45-day period, although the government can renew the ban for additional 45-day periods.",-0.828266786204444,,“Israel’s move today is a slippery slope.,2024-05-21 Trump Media lost more than $300 million last quarter on very little revenue,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/business/trump-media-quarterly-results/index.html," Updated 7:53 PM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","Trump Media & Technology Group lost more than $300 million during the first quarter and generated very little revenue, the owner of Truth Social announced in a press release Monday. The results will raise additional questions about the multi-billion dollar valuation on the newly public company, which is majority owned by former President Donald Trump. Trump Media (DJT) reported a loss of $327.6 million during the first three months of the year driven mostly by one-time losses linked to the deal that brought the company public earlier this year. The company lost $210,300 a year earlier. The company blamed the losses on non-cash expenses from the conversion of promissory notes and the elimination of previous liabilities. Trump Media reported an operating loss of $12.1 million, with a chunk of that being driven by one-time payments related to the closing of its merger with a blank-check company earlier this year. The company generated just $770,500 of revenue, marking the second-straight quarter where its revenue totaled less than $1 million. “I can’t emphasize enough how unusual it is for a company with this little revenue to have this high a valuation,” Matthew Kennedy, senior IPO market strategist at Renaissance Capital, told CNN in an email. In the press release, Trump Media said that at this “early stage” in its development, the company “remains focused on long-term product development, rather than quarterly revenue.” It acknowledged that its advertising business is just getting off the ground and expressed confidence that new products like streaming will boost its results in the future. “But if they’re not focused on revenue, public investors have very little to go on. What metrics can we look at? How can investors determine if the company is on the right track?” Kennedy said. “The company does not provide user metrics (though we could look at app downloads or Trump’s followers). It requires a lot of trust, and for now, shareholders seem to be willing to extend an enormous amount of trust. That can quickly change, as we saw in early April.” Trump Media said that it has “sufficient” cash to fund the business “for the foreseeable future.” The company listed a cash balance of $274 million as of the end of March — a sum boosted by its deal to go public. “After an unprecedented, years-long process, we have consummated our merger and dispensed with the vast bulk of merger-related expenses, leaving the Company well-capitalized and supported by a legion of retail shareholders who believe in our mission to provide a free-speech beachhead against Big Tech censorship,” Trump Media CEO Devin Nunes said in a statement. ` Nunes even said Trump Media’s cash balance gives the company the opportunity to explore potential mergers and acquisitions. Experts have said the price tag on Trump Media stock defies logic given the company’s financial results and small footprint in social media. Jay Ritter, a finance professor at the University of Florida’s Warrington College of Business, said “revenue is still anemic” for Trump Media. “Although the company is not burning through its ample cash reserves rapidly, it is not generating much revenue, suggesting that there is no reason to think that the company will turn the corner and become profitable in the foreseeable future,” Ritter said. Despite all the fanfare for the public listing earlier this year, Truth Social remains a very tiny player in social media. In April, the conservative-friendly social network experienced a 19% year-over-year drop in average daily active US users on iOS and Android to just 113,000, according to market research firm Similarweb. Rival X (formerly known as Twitter) had more than 34 million users on iOS and Android, while Instagram’s Threads had 3.5 million. Trump Media said its financials were reviewed by Semple, Marchal & Cooper, its newly hired accounting firm. The company’s previous accounting firm was accused of “massive fraud” by federal regulators this month. (Regulators made no allegation of wrongdoing against Trump Media, which was not mentioned in the charges against the auditor.)",CNN,20/05/2024,"['Trump Media & Technology Group lost more than $300 million during the first quarter and generated very little revenue, the owner of Truth Social announced in a press release Monday.', 'The results will raise additional questions about the multi-billion dollar valuation on the newly public company, which is majority owned by former President Donald Trump.', 'Trump Media (DJT) reported a loss of $327.6 million during the first three months of the year driven mostly by one-time losses linked to the deal that brought the company public earlier this year.', 'The company lost $210,300 a year earlier.', 'The company blamed the losses on non-cash expenses from the conversion of promissory notes and the elimination of previous liabilities.', 'Trump Media reported an operating loss of $12.1 million, with a chunk of that being driven by one-time payments related to the closing of its merger with a blank-check company earlier this year.', 'The company generated just $770,500 of revenue, marking the second-straight quarter where its revenue totaled less than $1 million.', '“I can’t emphasize enough how unusual it is for a company with this little revenue to have this high a valuation,” Matthew Kennedy, senior IPO market strategist at Renaissance Capital, told CNN in an email.', 'In the press release, Trump Media said that at this “early stage” in its development, the company “remains focused on long-term product development, rather than quarterly revenue.”', 'It acknowledged that its advertising business is just getting off the ground and expressed confidence that new products like streaming will boost its results in the future.', '“But if they’re not focused on revenue, public investors have very little to go on.', 'What metrics can we look at?', 'How can investors determine if the company is on the right track?”', 'Kennedy said. “', 'The company does not provide usermetrics (though we could look at app downloads or Trump’s followers).', 'It requires a lot of trust, and for now, shareholders seem to be willing to extend an enormous amount of trust.', 'That can quickly change, as we saw in early April.”', 'Trump Media said that it has “sufficient” cash to fund the business “for the foreseeable future.”', 'The company listed a cash balance of $274 million as of the end of March — a sum boosted by its deal to go public.', '“After an unprecedented, years-long process, we have consummated our merger and dispensed with the vast bulk of merger-related expenses, leaving the Company well-capitalized and supported by a legion of retail shareholders who believe in our mission to provide a free-speech beachhead against Big Tech censorship,” Trump Media CEO Devin Nunes said in a statement.', '` Nunes even said Trump Media’s cash balance gives the company the opportunity to explore potential mergers and acquisitions.', 'Experts have said the price tag on Trump Media stock defies logic given the company’s financial results and small footprint in social media.', 'Jay Ritter, a finance professor at the University of Florida’s Warrington College of Business, said “revenue is still anemic” for Trump Media.', '“Although the company is not burning through its ample cash reserves rapidly, it is not generating much revenue, suggesting that there is no reason to think that the company will turn the corner and become profitable in the foreseeable future,” Ritter said.', 'Despite all the fanfare for the public listing earlier this year, Truth Socialremains a very tiny player in social media.', 'In April, the conservative-friendly social network experienced a 19% year-over-year drop in average daily active US users on iOS and Android to just 113,000, according to market research firm Similarweb.', 'Rival X (formerly known as Twitter) had more than 34 million users on iOS and Android, while Instagram’s Threads had 3.5 million.', 'Trump Media said its financials were reviewed by Semple, Marchal & Cooper, its newly hired accounting firm.', 'The company’s previous accounting firm wasaccused of “massive fraud”by federal regulators this month. (', 'Regulators made no allegation of wrongdoing againstTrump Media, which was not mentioned in the charges against the auditor.)']",0.0671941261060192,"It requires a lot of trust, and for now, shareholders seem to be willing to extend an enormous amount of trust.",The company blamed the losses on non-cash expenses from the conversion of promissory notes and the elimination of previous liabilities.,-0.2050078908602396,It acknowledged that its advertising business is just getting off the ground and expressed confidence that new products like streaming will boost its results in the future.,"In April, the conservative-friendly social network experienced a 19% year-over-year drop in average daily active US users on iOS and Android to just 113,000, according to market research firm Similarweb.",2024-05-21 China is trying to end its ‘epic’ property crisis. The hard work is just beginning,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/21/economy/china-property-crisis-stimulus-challenges-intl-hnk/index.html," Published 6:14 AM EDT, Tue May 21, 2024 ","Beijing has launched its most ambitious plan yet to rescue its property market, a development that investors have eagerly anticipated for months. But it’s far from certain that the measures will work. The package is centered around Beijing’s adoption of a policy that has already been tested in a major city — asking local governments to buy unsold homes from developers and convert them into social affordable housing. It also features a reduction in mortgage interest rates and downpayment ratios, and more importantly, 300 billion yuan ($41.5 billion) in cheap central bank cash to fund state purchases of unsold properties. The announcement last week swiftly followed an April meeting of the Politburo, China’s top ruling body, indicating that stabilizing the property sector has become a top priority for Beijing as it tries to revive growth in the world’s second biggest economy. “The policymakers recognize the urgency to prevent an outright property crisis,” said Zhaopeng Xing, senior China strategist at ANZ Research. “The new rescue plan demonstrates the policymakers’ resolution to turn things around.” While the urgency is welcome, experts say the current package may be far too small in scale to be effective and could suffer problems with funding. According to Goldman Sachs, the total value of unsold homes, unfinished projects and unused land in China is about 30 trillion yuan ($4.1 trillion). To reduce the supply of housing to levels last seen in 2018, the year the real estate boom peaked, may require more than 7 trillion yuan ($967 billion) for all cities, the Goldman analysts wrote in a Monday research note. That’s more than 20 times the amount of funding announced by the People’s Bank of China (PBOC). Even though China’s economy expanded faster than expected at the start of this year, growth is being weighed down by the all-important real estate sector, which once accounted for as much as 30% of economic activity. Despite the flurry of announcements last week, it’s still unclear exactly how the government purchases will be implemented and how much is needed to fund the buying. Most importantly, there is lack of clarity on where cash-strapped local governments can get the money to pay for it. On Friday, Tao Ling, deputy governor of the PBOC, said the relending program could eventually underpin 500 billion yuan ($69 billion) worth of bank loans to support the buying. But even this figure is much less than what could be needed. Some analysts estimate that hundreds of billions of dollars might be necessary to clear the backlog of millions of empty or unfinished homes across the country. Ting Lu, chief China economist at Nomura, who has called the country’s housing problem “epic,” says just finishing construction of pre-sold homes would require at least 3.2 trillion yuan ($442 billion). He estimated that there are currently 20 million pre-sold homes that remain unbuilt. Helen Qiao, chief economist for Greater China at Bank of America, said the funding size of a maximum of 500 billion yuan was “rather underwhelming.” Without further expansion, the plan was unlikely to make a “notable difference” to the inventory of empty or unfinished homes, she added. It’s also unclear where indebted local governments can get the funding, beyond the relatively small amounts the PBOC is channeling via state banks. The Housing Ministry said Friday that local governments can instruct local state-owned enterprises to help purchase some unsold homes from developers. But local government financing vehicles (LGFV), which are already carrying a huge amount of “hidden” debt, are not allowed to make the purchases, according to Tao from PBOC. That leaves fewer options for local authorities to find the cash. Chinese cities have already racked up about $15 trillion in debt, much of it hidden, having borrowed heavily in recent years to cover the cost of pandemic-related spending and infrastructure projects. The housing market slump has exacerbated their financial woes, as land sales typically account for more than 40% of local government revenue. The debt distress has forced many Chinese cities to slash spending, including suspending basic services, such as heating people’s homes in winter. “It’s debatable whether it’s a good idea to put more debt on already highly-leveraged local governments,” Jing Liu and Taylor Wang, China economists for HSBC, said in a note on Monday. China’s property industry began to cool in 2019 and fell into a deep trough about three years ago after a government-led clampdown on developers’ borrowing. Policy rescue efforts started as early as 2022, when the slump triggered crises at some developers and sparked protests by tens of thousands of homebuyers in response to delayed or stalled projects. But the measures have been largely ineffective, resulting in a deterioration of cash flow among developers. The most recent saga at Vanke, a major real estate company, suggests every developer is at risk, Xing said. Addressing the oversupply of unsold homes is only the first step, experts say. Broadly speaking, the government needs to tackle three problems, according to Goldman analysts. The first step involves bailing out developers and helping them complete pre-sold but unfinished homes, which is what the new measures are intended to tackle. “This is important for maintaining overall social stability and stemming further declines in new home sales,” they said. But the second and third steps involve boosting housing demand and mitigating the contraction in property construction, they said. That requires more detailed measures to revive consumer confidence and boost housing prices. Making matters worse, the external environment has become increasingly difficult. Last week, the US government announced new tariffs on China, which could be followed by similar action by the European Union. Former President Donald Trump has threatened to go even further by slapping 60% tariffs on imports from China if he is re-elected. Xing estimated that Trump’s proposed tariffs could cut China’s growth rate by as much as 0.9%. “The rescue is not a game-changer for low-tier cities’ housing, which will likely remain depressed,” Michelle Lam and Wei Yao, China economists at Société Générale, said in a research note on Monday. They also think the rescue plan needs to be expanded, with more detailed policies to be announced. But what matters the most is that Beijing has taken the bold initiative, which will help stabilize expectations. Taking a long-term perspective, the plan could reduce the risk of China sliding into a “deflationary spiral” like Japan did, as a key lesson from there is that policy makers should avoid doing too little, too late, they said. “[This might be] the beginning of the end of China’s housing crisis,” they added.",CNN,21/05/2024,"['Beijing has launched its most ambitious plan yet to rescue its property market, a development that investors have eagerly anticipated for months.', 'But it’s far from certain that the measures will work.', 'The package is centered around Beijing’s adoption of a policy that has already been tested in a major city — asking local governments to buy unsold homes from developers and convert them into social affordable housing.', 'It also features a reduction in mortgage interest rates and downpayment ratios, and more importantly, 300 billion yuan ($41.5 billion) in cheap central bank cash to fund state purchases of unsold properties.', 'The announcement last week swiftly followed an April meeting of the Politburo, China’stoprulingbody, indicating that stabilizing the property sector has become a top priority for Beijing as it tries to revive growth in the world’s second biggest economy.', '“The policymakers recognize the urgency to prevent an outright property crisis,” said Zhaopeng Xing, senior China strategist at ANZ Research. “', 'The new rescue plan demonstrates the policymakers’ resolution to turn things around.”', 'While the urgency is welcome, experts say the current package may be far too small in scale to be effective and could suffer problems with funding.', 'According to Goldman Sachs, the total value of unsold homes, unfinished projects and unused land in China is about 30 trillion yuan ($4.1 trillion).', 'To reduce the supply of housing to levels last seen in 2018, the year the real estate boom peaked, may require more than 7 trillion yuan ($967 billion) for all cities, the Goldman analysts wrote in a Monday research note.', 'That’s more than 20 times the amount of funding announced by the People’s Bank of China (PBOC).', 'Even though China’s economy expanded faster than expected at the start of this year, growth is being weighed down by the all-important real estate sector, which once accounted for as much as 30% of economic activity.', 'Despite the flurry of announcements last week, it’s still unclear exactly how the government purchases will be implemented and how much is needed to fund the buying.', 'Most importantly, there is lack of clarity on where cash-strapped local governments can get the money to pay for it.', 'On Friday, Tao Ling, deputy governor of the PBOC, said the relending program could eventually underpin 500 billion yuan ($69 billion) worth of bank loans to support the buying.', 'But even this figure is much less than what could be needed.', 'Some analysts estimate that hundreds of billions of dollars might be necessary to clear the backlog of millions of empty or unfinished homes across the country.', 'Ting Lu, chief China economist at Nomura, who has called the country’s housing problem “epic,” says just finishing construction of pre-sold homes would require at least 3.2 trillion yuan($442 billion).', 'He estimated that there are currently 20 million pre-sold homes that remain unbuilt.', 'Helen Qiao, chief economist for Greater China at Bank of America, said the funding size of a maximum of 500 billion yuan was “rather underwhelming.”', 'Without further expansion, the plan was unlikely to make a “notable difference” to the inventory of empty or unfinished homes, she added.', 'It’s also unclear where indebted local governments can get the funding, beyond the relatively small amounts the PBOC is channeling via state banks.', 'The Housing Ministry said Friday that local governments can instruct local state-owned enterprises to help purchase some unsold homes from developers.', 'But local government financing vehicles (LGFV), which are already carrying a huge amount of “hidden” debt, are not allowed to make the purchases, according to Tao from PBOC.', 'That leaves fewer options for local authorities to find the cash.', 'Chinese cities have already racked up about $15 trillion in debt, much of it hidden, having borrowed heavily in recent years to cover the cost of pandemic-related spending and infrastructure projects.', 'The housing market slump has exacerbated their financial woes, as land sales typically account for more than 40% of local government revenue.', 'The debt distress has forced many Chinese cities to slash spending, including suspending basic services, such as heating people’s homes in winter.', '“It’s debatable whether it’s a good idea to put more debt on already highly-leveraged local governments,” Jing Liu and Taylor Wang, China economists for HSBC, said in a note on Monday.', 'China’s property industry began to cool in 2019 and fell into a deep trough about three years ago after a government-led clampdown on developers’ borrowing.', 'Policy rescue efforts started as early as 2022, when the slump triggered crises at some developers and sparked protests by tens of thousands of homebuyers in response to delayed or stalled projects.', 'But the measures have been largely ineffective, resulting in a deterioration of cash flow among developers.', 'The most recent saga at Vanke, a major real estate company, suggests every developer is at risk, Xing said.', 'Addressing the oversupply of unsold homes is only the first step, experts say.', 'Broadly speaking, the government needs to tackle three problems, according to Goldman analysts.', 'The first step involves bailing out developers and helping them complete pre-sold but unfinished homes, which is what the new measures are intended to tackle.', '“This is important for maintaining overall social stability and stemming further declines in new home sales,” they said.', 'But the second and third steps involve boosting housing demand and mitigating the contraction in property construction, they said.', 'That requires more detailed measures to revive consumer confidence and boost housing prices.', 'Making matters worse, the external environment has become increasingly difficult.', 'Last week, the US government announced new tariffs on China, which could be followed by similar action by the European Union.', 'Former President Donald Trump has threatened togo even further by slapping 60% tariffs on imports from Chinaif he is re-elected.', 'Xing estimated that Trump’s proposed tariffs could cut China’s growth rate by as much as 0.9%.', '“The rescue is not a game-changer for low-tier cities’ housing, which will likely remain depressed,” Michelle Lam and Wei Yao, China economists at Société Générale, said in a research note on Monday.', 'They also think the rescue plan needs to be expanded, with more detailed policies to be announced.', 'But what matters the most is that Beijing has taken the bold initiative, which will help stabilize expectations.', 'Taking a long-term perspective, the plan could reduce the risk of China sliding into a “deflationary spiral” like Japan did, as a key lesson from there is that policy makers should avoid doing too little, too late, they said.', '“[This might be] the beginning of the end of China’s housing crisis,” they added.']",0.0545785679651435,"Beijing has launched its most ambitious plan yet to rescue its property market, a development that investors have eagerly anticipated for months.","The debt distress has forced many Chinese cities to slash spending, including suspending basic services, such as heating people’s homes in winter.",-0.3114581704139709,"But what matters the most is that Beijing has taken the bold initiative, which will help stabilize expectations.","But the measures have been largely ineffective, resulting in a deterioration of cash flow among developers.",2024-05-21 "Trump’s new trade war would cost middle-class families at least $1,700 a year, report warns",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/21/business/trump-trade-war-tariffs-china/index.html," Published 6:00 AM EDT, Tue May 21, 2024 ","Former President Donald Trump’s trade agenda amounts to a tripling-down of the trade war he waged during his first term in office. Not only has Trump called for a 60% tariff on all Chinese goods, the presumptive GOP presidential nominee has said he would impose a tariff of at least a 10% on all $3 trillion worth of US imports. While Trump has championed aggressive tariffs as a way to protect working-class Americans, new research suggests they would do the opposite. Trump’s unprecedented trade proposals would inflict “significant collateral damage on the US economy,” costing consumers at least $500 billion a year, or 1.8% of gross domestic product (GDP), according to a paper published Monday by the Peterson Institute for International Economics. That’s nearly five times the total cost as a share of GDP from the 2018-2019 US-China trade war. Trump’s tariff proposals would cost the typical middle-income household at least $1,700 a year, the researchers found. “These policies are more likely to hurt than help the lower- and middle-income Americans they purport to benefit,” authors Kimberly Clausing and Mary Lovely, senior fellows at the Peterson Institute, wrote in the paper, titled “Why Trump’s Tariff Proposals Would Harm Working Americans.” The paper stresses that the $1,700 hit to the typical family is just the minimum impact, as the estimate does not include damage from foreign retaliation, slower economic growth and lost competitiveness. The authors warn the actual impact could be twice as high. “This is the tip of the iceberg,” Clausing, chair in tax law and policy at the UCLA School of Law, told CNN in a phone interview. “The cost of retaliation will be very large. The Europeans will tariff us. The Mexicans and Canadians will be very upset. People aren’t going to take it lying down.” Of course, Trump is hardly alone in embracing tariffs. President Joe Biden largely kept in place the Trump-era tariffs – even though he criticized them in the lead-up to the 2020 election. “Despite having ample opportunity,” the authors wrote, Biden has “failed to remove” the China tariffs that “continue to harm American households, although to a far smaller degree than Trump’s proposed tariffs would do.” Biden hasn’t just kept the Trump tariffs in place. He has added to them, albeit in a much more targeted way. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, in remarks she delivered Tuesday morning in Frankfurt, Germany, called on Europe to join the United States in its effort to fight back against a flood of cheap Chinese goods entering the global marketplace. “Industrial overcapacity not only poses a threat to firms in the U.S. and Europe. It could also prevent countries around the world, including emerging markets, from building the industries that could power their growth,” Yellen said. “If we do not respond strategically and in a united way, the viability of businesses in both our countries and around the world could be at risk.” Last week Biden announced increased tariffs on $18 billion worth of Chinese goods, including steel, aluminum, computer chips, electric vehicles and solar cells. Clausing, a former Biden official at the Treasury Department, told CNN that a rough estimate suggests these targeted Biden tariffs will cost the typical family approximately $30 a year. “Eighteen billion dollars is incredibly small relative to $3 trillion. Those aren’t comparable numbers,” Clausing said, referring to the amount of imports targeted by Biden and by Trump tariffs. Karoline Leavitt, the Trump campaign’s national press secretary, said in response to the research that Trump negotiated better trade deals during his first term that boosted the US economy. “The American people don’t need ‘papers’ from alleged ‘experts’ to know Bidenomics has robbed them of thousands of hard-earned dollars, and they will have more money back in their pockets with President Trump back in the White House,” Leavitt said in a statement to CNN. Leavitt argued that “out of control spending created the worst inflation crisis in generations” during the Biden administration. “When President Trump is back, he will reimplement his America First, pro-growth, pro-job agenda and cut good trade deals that uplift the American worker and family,” she said. To be sure, Trump has legitimate gripes with China on trade. Many Democrats and CEOs share concerns about China’s trade practices, including alleged theft of trade secrets, “dumping” goods at artificially cheap prices and other moves that make it difficult to compete on a level playing field. However, some economists have expressed alarm at the massive tariff proposals from Trump, who famously labeled himself “Tariff Man” in 2018. Moody’s recently estimated that even if Trump cushioned the blow from tariffs with tax cuts, his trade proposals would cost the US economy 675,000 jobs, worsen inflation and shrink GDP by 0.6 percentage points. Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s, told CNN last month that the US economy would likely plunge into a recession when factoring in retaliation from other nations. The Peterson Institute research found that even the high end of projections for revenue generated would fall “far short” of what would be needed to pay for an extension of Trump’s tax cuts, which are set to expire at the end of 2025. It would cost approximately $4.6 trillion if the Trump tax cuts are extended for the next decade, according to a recent Congressional Budget Office report. The benefits from expanding the Trump tax cuts would go “disproportionately to the top end of the income distribution,” the Peterson Institute researchers found. Bigger picture, the risk of a broader global trade fight could also impact international affairs. The Peterson Institute authors argued the trade tensions would make it harder for nations to collaborate on other critical issues such as climate change, public health emergencies, security and nuclear proliferation. “In short, the proposed policies come with serious national security risks,” they wrote. The Peterson Institute trade analysis assumes that tariffs are “fully passed on to US buyers” – a finding disputed by Trump, who has repeatedly suggested that other nations are paying for US tariffs. However, many experts say US consumers and businesses pay the cost of the tariffs. “The 2018-2019 tariffs clearly raised consumer prices,” Goldman Sachs economists wrote in a recent report to clients, adding that these price increases were “borne almost entirely by US businesses and households” – not Chinese exporters. Likewise, the US International Trade Commission found in a 2023 study that US importers “bore nearly the full cost” of tariffs. That independent agency estimated that prices increased by about 1% for each 1% increase in tariffs on Chinese-made goods, steel and aluminum. “In contrast to Trump’s frequent, and mistaken, claims that foreigners bear the impact of tariffs, economists have long understood that tariffs burden domestic purchasers of imported goods,” the Peterson Institute paper said. “The data show that higher tariffs are fully reflected in higher prices for US buyers.” No matter who wins in November, tariffs are expected to remain in favor in Washington – especially on China. Both parties have embraced tariffs as a way to show they are tough on China, and there is little appetite to back down – even though economists say lower tariffs could help ease inflation. Policies that favor American factories are “arguably the most bipartisan issue in an increasingly partisan Washington,” Chris Krueger, managing director of TD Cowen’s Washington Research Group, wrote in a note to clients on Monday.",CNN,21/05/2024,"['Former President Donald Trump’s trade agenda amounts to a tripling-down of the trade war he waged during his first term in office.', 'Not only has Trump called for a 60% tariff on all Chinese goods, the presumptive GOP presidential nominee has said he would impose a tariff of at least a 10% on all $3 trillion worth of US imports.', 'While Trump has championed aggressive tariffs as a way to protect working-class Americans, new research suggests they would do the opposite.', 'Trump’s unprecedented trade proposals would inflict “significant collateral damage on the US economy,” costing consumers at least $500 billion a year, or 1.8% of gross domestic product (GDP), according to a paper published Monday by the Peterson Institute for International Economics.', 'That’s nearly five times the total cost as a share of GDP from the 2018-2019 US-China trade war.', 'Trump’s tariff proposals would cost the typical middle-income household at least $1,700 a year, the researchers found.', '“These policies are more likely to hurt than help the lower- and middle-income Americans they purport to benefit,” authors Kimberly Clausing and Mary Lovely, senior fellows at the Peterson Institute, wrote in the paper, titled “Why Trump’s Tariff Proposals Would Harm Working Americans.”', 'The paper stresses that the $1,700 hit to the typical family is just the minimum impact, as the estimate does not include damage from foreign retaliation, slower economic growth and lost competitiveness.', 'The authors warn the actual impact could be twice as high.', '“This is the tip of the iceberg,” Clausing, chair in tax law and policy at the UCLA School of Law, told CNN in a phone interview. “', 'The cost of retaliation will be very large.', 'The Europeans will tariff us.', 'The Mexicans and Canadians will be very upset.', 'People aren’t going to take it lying down.”', 'Of course, Trump is hardly alone in embracing tariffs.', 'President Joe Biden largely kept in place the Trump-era tariffs – even though he criticized them in the lead-up to the 2020 election.', '“Despite having ample opportunity,” the authors wrote, Biden has “failed to remove” the China tariffs that “continue to harm American households, although to a far smaller degree than Trump’s proposed tariffs would do.”', 'Biden hasn’t just kept the Trump tariffs in place.', 'He has added to them, albeit in a much more targeted way.', 'Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, in remarks she delivered Tuesday morning in Frankfurt, Germany, called on Europe to join the United States in its effort to fight back against a flood of cheap Chinese goods entering the global marketplace.', '“Industrial overcapacity not only poses a threat to firms in the U.S. and Europe.', 'It could also prevent countries around the world, including emerging markets, from building the industries that could power their growth,” Yellen said. “', 'If we do not respond strategically and in a united way, the viability of businesses in both our countries and around the world could be at risk.”', 'Last week Biden announced increased tariffs on $18 billion worth of Chinese goods, including steel, aluminum, computer chips, electric vehicles and solar cells.', 'Clausing, a former Biden official at the Treasury Department, told CNN that a rough estimate suggests these targeted Biden tariffs will cost the typical family approximately $30 a year.', '“Eighteen billion dollars is incredibly small relative to $3 trillion.', 'Those aren’t comparable numbers,” Clausing said, referring to the amount of imports targeted by Biden and by Trump tariffs.', 'Karoline Leavitt, the Trump campaign’s national press secretary, said in response to the research that Trump negotiated better trade deals during his first term that boosted the US economy.', '“The American people don’t need ‘papers’ from alleged ‘experts’ to know Bidenomics has robbed them of thousands of hard-earned dollars, and they will have more money back in their pockets with President Trump back in the White House,” Leavitt said in a statement to CNN.', 'Leavitt argued that “out of control spending created the worst inflation crisis in generations” during the Biden administration.', '“When President Trump is back, he will reimplement his America First, pro-growth, pro-job agenda and cut good trade deals that uplift the American worker and family,” she said.', 'To be sure, Trump has legitimate gripes with China on trade.', 'Many Democrats and CEOs share concerns about China’s trade practices, including alleged theft of trade secrets, “dumping” goods at artificially cheap prices and other moves that make it difficult to compete on a level playing field.', 'However, some economists have expressed alarm at the massive tariff proposals from Trump, who famously labeled himself “Tariff Man” in 2018.', 'Moody’s recently estimated that even if Trump cushioned the blow from tariffs with tax cuts, his trade proposals would cost the US economy 675,000 jobs, worsen inflation and shrink GDP by 0.6 percentage points.', 'Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s, told CNN last month that the US economy would likely plunge into a recession when factoring in retaliation from other nations.', 'The Peterson Institute research found that even the high end of projections for revenue generated would fall “far short” of what would be needed to pay for an extension of Trump’s tax cuts, which are set to expire at the end of 2025.', 'It would cost approximately $4.6 trillion if the Trump tax cuts are extended for the next decade, according to a recent Congressional Budget Office report.', 'The benefits from expanding the Trump tax cuts would go “disproportionately to the top end of the income distribution,” the Peterson Institute researchers found.', 'Bigger picture, the risk of a broader global trade fight could also impact international affairs.', 'The Peterson Institute authors argued the trade tensions would make it harder for nations to collaborate on other critical issues such as climate change, public health emergencies, security and nuclear proliferation.', '“In short, the proposed policies come with serious national security risks,” they wrote.', 'The Peterson Institute trade analysis assumes that tariffs are “fully passed on to US buyers” – a finding disputed by Trump, who has repeatedly suggested that other nations are paying for US tariffs.', 'However, many experts say US consumers and businesses pay the cost of the tariffs.', '“The 2018-2019 tariffs clearly raised consumer prices,” Goldman Sachs economists wrote in a recent report to clients, adding that these price increases were “borne almost entirely by US businesses and households” – not Chinese exporters.', 'Likewise, the US International Trade Commission found in a 2023 study that US importers “bore nearly the full cost” of tariffs.', 'That independent agency estimated that prices increased by about 1% for each 1% increase in tariffs on Chinese-made goods, steel and aluminum.', '“In contrast to Trump’s frequent, and mistaken, claims that foreigners bear the impact of tariffs, economists have long understood that tariffs burden domestic purchasers of imported goods,” the Peterson Institute paper said. “', 'The data show that higher tariffs are fully reflected in higher prices for US buyers.”', 'No matter who wins in November, tariffs are expected to remain in favor in Washington – especially on China.', 'Both parties have embraced tariffs as a way to show they are tough on China, and there is little appetite to back down – even though economists say lower tariffs could help ease inflation.', 'Policies that favor American factories are “arguably the most bipartisan issue in an increasingly partisan Washington,” Chris Krueger, managing director of TD Cowen’s Washington Research Group, wrote in a note to clients on Monday.']",-0.0803540655526095,"Karoline Leavitt, the Trump campaign’s national press secretary, said in response to the research that Trump negotiated better trade deals during his first term that boosted the US economy.",Leavitt argued that “out of control spending created the worst inflation crisis in generations” during the Biden administration.,-0.477447543074103,"Karoline Leavitt, the Trump campaign’s national press secretary, said in response to the research that Trump negotiated better trade deals during his first term that boosted the US economy.","The Peterson Institute research found that even the high end of projections for revenue generated would fall “far short” of what would be needed to pay for an extension of Trump’s tax cuts, which are set to expire at the end of 2025.",2024-05-21 How to make high interest rates work for your hard-earned savings,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/20/success/interest-rates-savings-cash/index.html," Published 3:00 PM EDT, Wed March 20, 2024 ","The Federal Reserve’s benchmark interest rate remains at a 23-year high. That’s thanks to the central bank’s decision Wednesday to once again hold it steady, as it has done at the policy-making committee’s past five meetings. That decision may be disappointing to some investors, homebuyers and those with a lot of credit card debt, since movement in the Fed’s overnight lending rate influences rates — directly or indirectly — on consumer financial products (e.g., credit cards, bank loans and mortgages). But with the Fed signaling that no rate cuts are likely until summer, it also means anyone with savings still has at least a few more months to make hay of their stash. That’s because you can still get inflation-beating interest rates that will grow any money you have set aside for emergencies, vacations, down payments or any other goal in your sights over the next several years. However, that won’t happen if you just let it sit in a traditional checking or savings account that yields next to nothing. There are more lucrative, low-risk options out there, with rates that are still at or near their peaks. “But perhaps not for much longer,” said Ted Rossman, senior analyst at Bankrate. “If one of those fits into your financial plans, it’s best to act soon.” So, consider the following options when deciding where to park your hard-earned savings. The average annual percentage yield on bank savings accounts was just 0.52% as of March 13, according to Bankrate. That average is kept low by the biggest brick-and-mortar banks like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, which still are offering a paltry 0.01%. By contrast, there are still FDIC-insured online banks offering inflation-beating rates of between 4.35% and 5.35% on their high-yield savings accounts. Generally speaking, these are the best vehicles in which to keep your emergency funds for quick, easy access. Choosing between an account that pays 0.52% and one that pays 5.35% can mean forfeiting hundreds of dollars in interest. “If you put $10,000 in a savings account, that’s a difference of $496 in interest earnings over the course of the year, assuming monthly compounding,” Rossman said. While the rates on high-yield savings accounts have gone down a bit in recent months, “widespread cuts in online savings account rates are unlikely until the first Fed rate cut is near,” said Ken Tumin, founder of DepositAccounts.com. As with any bank savings rate, high-yield savings account rates can change overnight, and the bank may not alert you when it lowers it. So make sure to check your monthly statement. Another high-return, low-risk investment that is great for money you likely won’t need to tap for a few months or even a couple of years is a certificate of deposit. You can get the best returns on CDs through a brokerage such as Schwab, E*Trade or Fidelity. That’s because you can comparison shop for CDs from any number of FDIC-insured banks and will not have to set up individual accounts with each institution. As of March 13, the average rate on a one-year CD was 1.95%, but some banks are offering as much are 5.4%. If you can get a one-year CD at, say, 5.4%, you will make $540 on a $10,000 investment. To get the greatest benefit from a CD, you have to leave the money invested for a fixed period. You can always access your principal sooner if you need to, but there may be early withdrawal penalties. As of March 20, CDs listed on Schwab.com with durations from three months up to three years were all yielding between 5.2% and 5.51%. CD rates on durations between four and 10 years ranged from 4.40% to 5.15%. Say you invest $10,000 in a one-year CD with a 5.36% APY. At the end of that period, you’d get your principal back plus $536 in interest when the CD matures, according to Bankrate’s CD calculator. If you chose a two-year CD at 5.25%, you’d bank an extra $1,078, assuming compounding interest. The same investment in a five-year CD at 5.15% would earn $2,854. “It makes sense to go long with CDs. To hedge your bets, include terms from one to five years. Starting a CD ladder will provide this mix,” Tumin said. If you don’t go through a brokerage you may get a reasonable deal from your primary bank, Tumin said. For example, he noted, Wells Fargo is still offering up to 5.01% on both 4-month and 7-month CDs. Or, at Bank of America, you can get up to 4.75% on a 7-month CD. But Tumin cautions that with any big bank CD you should take your money out at the end of the term, otherwise your bank may automatically renew it and lock you in to a much lower-yielding CD. If you don’t want to set up an online savings account at another bank, your own bank may offer you a money market deposit account that pays a higher yield than your regular checking or savings accounts. Money market accounts may have higher minimum deposit requirements than a regular savings account, but they are more liquid than a fixed-term certificate of deposit or Treasury bill, meaning they give you access to your money more quickly while still potentially giving you some of the highest yields available, said Doug Ornstein, senior manager for integrated solutions at TIAA Wealth Management. But don’t confuse money market accounts with money market mutual funds, which invest in short-term, low-risk debt instruments. As of March 19, they had an average 7-day yield of 5.14%, according to the Crane Money Fund Index, which tracks the top 100 taxable money market funds. Unlike money market deposit accounts, money market mutual funds are not insured by the FDIC. But if you invest in a money market fund through a brokerage, your overall account is likely to be insured through the Securities Investor Protection Corp, which offers protection in the event your brokerage ever goes under. Another option for money you can leave untouched anywhere from several months to a few years is to buy short-term Treasury bills and medium-term notes, which are backed by the full faith and credit of the United States. Three- and six-month bills had yields of 5.39% and 5.33% respectively on March 20 before the Fed’s meeting ended, while nine-month and one-year bills were offering 5.19% and 5.08% respectively, according to rates posted on Schwab.com for a $25,000 investment. Rates on Treasury notes with durations from two years to 10 years ranged between 4.29% and 4.72%. If you’re someone who manages your portfolio like a hawk, you may feel comfortable buying T-bills on your own from TreasuryDirect.gov. But if you don’t, it might be easier just to buy new issues through your brokerage account or invest in a short-term bond index fund or ETF, said Andy Smith, executive director of financial planning at Edelman Financial Engines. And if you’re looking at money that will be needed in three to five years, you might consider a diversified fund of highly rated government and corporate bonds, Ornstein said. An 18-month AAA-rated corporate bond, for instance, was yielding 4.82% this week, while the three-year was at 4.49%. Meanwhile, three-year AAA-rated municipal bonds (which are issued by local governments) had a rate of 3.98%, according to Schwab.com. When deciding on the best accounts and investments for your specific goals and peace of mind, it may pay to consult a fee-only fiduciary adviser — meaning, someone who doesn’t get paid a commission to sell you a particular investment. What you’ll always want to do is build in flexibility for yourself so you can easily access cash, regardless of your timeline for key goals. “What happens if something changes and you need that down payment a lot sooner — or your parents need medical care fast?” Smith said. That means balancing your desire for great yield with a need and desire for ease of access without penalty. Translation: Don’t chase yield for yield’s sake. Think of it this way, Ornstein said: Unless you have huge sums to invest or are an institutional investor, the difference between getting a 5.1% yield versus 5% is negligible, and in fact it could even cost you more if there are penalties for taking your money out early. “Most of the time convenience is really important. Give up the 0.1%,” he advised.",CNN,20/03/2024,"['The Federal Reserve’s benchmark interest rate remains at a 23-year high.', 'That’s thanks to the central bank’s decision Wednesday to once again hold it steady, as it has done at the policy-making committee’s past five meetings.', 'That decision may be disappointing to some investors, homebuyers and those with a lot of credit card debt, since movement in the Fed’s overnight lending rate influences rates — directly or indirectly — on consumer financial products (e.g., credit cards, bank loans and mortgages).', 'Butwith the Fed signaling that no rate cuts are likely until summer, it also means anyone with savings still has at least a few more months to make hay of their stash.', 'That’s because you can still get inflation-beating interest rates that will grow any money you have set aside for emergencies, vacations, down payments or any other goal in your sights over the next several years.', 'However, that won’t happen if you just let it sit in a traditional checking or savings account that yields next to nothing.', 'There are more lucrative, low-risk options out there, with rates that are still at or near their peaks. “', 'But perhaps not for much longer,” said Ted Rossman, senior analyst at Bankrate. “', 'If one of those fits into your financial plans, it’s best to act soon.”', 'So, consider the following options when deciding where to park your hard-earned savings.', 'The average annual percentage yield on bank savings accounts was just 0.52% as of March 13, according to Bankrate.', 'That average is kept low by the biggest brick-and-mortar banks like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, which still are offering a paltry 0.01%.', 'By contrast, there are still FDIC-insured online banks offering inflation-beating rates of between 4.35% and 5.35% on their high-yield savings accounts.', 'Generally speaking, these are the best vehicles in which to keep your emergency funds for quick, easy access.', 'Choosing between an account that pays 0.52% and one that pays 5.35% can mean forfeiting hundreds of dollars in interest. “', 'If you put $10,000 in a savings account, that’s a difference of $496 in interest earnings over the course of the year, assuming monthly compounding,” Rossman said.', 'While the rates on high-yield savings accounts have gone down a bit in recent months, “widespread cuts in online savings account rates are unlikely until the first Fed rate cut is near,” said Ken Tumin, founder of DepositAccounts.com.', 'As with any bank savings rate, high-yield savings accountratescan change overnight, and the bank may not alert you when it lowers it.', 'So make sure to check your monthly statement.', 'Another high-return, low-risk investment that is great for money you likely won’t need to tap for a few months or even a couple of years is a certificate of deposit.', 'You can get the best returns on CDs through a brokerage such as Schwab, E*Trade or Fidelity.', 'That’s because you can comparison shop for CDs from any number of FDIC-insured banks and will not have to set up individual accounts with each institution.', 'As of March 13, the average rate on a one-year CD was 1.95%, but some banks are offering as much are 5.4%.', 'If you can get a one-year CD at, say, 5.4%, you will make $540 on a $10,000 investment.', 'To get the greatest benefit from a CD, you have to leave the money invested for a fixed period.', 'You can always access your principal sooner if you need to, but there may be early withdrawal penalties.', 'As of March 20, CDs listed on Schwab.com with durations from three months up to three years were all yielding between 5.2% and 5.51%.', 'CD rates on durations between four and 10 years ranged from 4.40% to 5.15%.', 'Say you invest $10,000 in a one-year CD with a 5.36%APY.', 'At the end of that period, you’d get your principal back plus $536 in interest when the CD matures, according to Bankrate’s CD calculator.', 'If you chose a two-year CD at 5.25%, you’d bank an extra $1,078, assuming compounding interest.', 'The same investment in a five-year CD at 5.15% would earn $2,854.', '“It makes sense to go long with CDs.', 'To hedge your bets, include terms from one to five years.', 'Starting a CD ladder will provide this mix,” Tumin said.', 'If you don’t go through a brokerage you may get a reasonable deal from your primary bank, Tumin said.', 'For example, he noted, Wells Fargo is still offering up to 5.01% on both 4-month and 7-month CDs.', 'Or, at Bank of America, you can get up to 4.75% on a 7-month CD.', 'But Tumin cautions that with any big bank CD you should take your money out at the end of the term, otherwise your bank may automatically renew it and lock you in to a much lower-yielding CD.', 'If you don’t want to set up an online savings account at another bank, your own bank may offer you a money market deposit account that pays a higher yield than your regular checking or savings accounts.', 'Money market accounts may have higher minimum deposit requirements than a regular savings account, but they are more liquid than a fixed-term certificate of deposit or Treasury bill, meaning they give you access to your money more quickly while still potentially giving you some of the highest yields available, said Doug Ornstein, senior manager for integrated solutions at TIAA Wealth Management.', 'But don’t confuse money market accounts with money market mutual funds, which invest in short-term, low-risk debt instruments.', 'As of March 19, they had an average 7-day yield of 5.14%, according to the Crane Money Fund Index, which tracks the top 100 taxable money market funds.', 'Unlike money market deposit accounts, money market mutual funds are not insured by the FDIC.', 'But if you invest in a money market fund through a brokerage, your overall account is likely to be insured through the Securities Investor Protection Corp, which offers protection in the event your brokerage ever goes under.', 'Another option for money you can leave untouched anywhere from several months to a few years is to buy short-term Treasury bills and medium-term notes, which are backed by the full faith and credit of the United States.', 'Three- and six-month bills had yields of 5.39% and 5.33%respectively on March 20 before the Fed’s meeting ended, while nine-month and one-year bills were offering 5.19% and 5.08%respectively, according to rates posted on Schwab.com for a $25,000 investment.', 'Rates on Treasury notes with durations from two years to 10 years ranged between 4.29% and 4.72%.', 'If you’re someone who manages your portfolio like a hawk, you may feel comfortable buying T-bills on your own from TreasuryDirect.gov.', 'But if you don’t, it might be easier just to buy new issues through your brokerage account or invest in a short-term bond index fund or ETF, said Andy Smith, executive director of financial planning at Edelman Financial Engines.', 'And if you’re looking at money that will be needed in three to five years, you might consider a diversified fund of highly rated government and corporate bonds, Ornstein said.', 'An 18-month AAA-rated corporate bond, for instance, was yielding 4.82% this week, while the three-year was at 4.49%.', 'Meanwhile, three-year AAA-rated municipal bonds (which are issued by local governments) had a rate of 3.98%, according to Schwab.com.', 'When deciding on the best accounts and investments for your specific goals and peace of mind, it may pay to consult a fee-only fiduciary adviser — meaning, someone who doesn’t get paid a commission to sell you a particular investment.', 'What you’ll always want to do is build in flexibility for yourself so you can easily access cash, regardless of your timeline for key goals. “', 'What happens if something changes and you need that down payment a lot sooner — or your parents need medical care fast?”', 'Smith said.', 'That means balancing your desire for great yield with a need and desire for ease of access without penalty.', 'Translation: Don’t chase yield for yield’s sake.', 'Think of it this way, Ornstein said: Unless you have huge sums to invest or are an institutional investor, the difference between getting a 5.1% yield versus 5% is negligible, and in fact it could even cost you more if there are penalties for taking your money out early. “', 'Most of the time convenience is really important.', 'Give up the 0.1%,” he advised.']",0.1607169988950149,That means balancing your desire for great yield with a need and desire for ease of access without penalty.,"But don’t confuse money market accounts with money market mutual funds, which invest in short-term, low-risk debt instruments.",0.3840319812297821,"For example, he noted, Wells Fargo is still offering up to 5.01% on both 4-month and 7-month CDs.","That decision may be disappointing to some investors, homebuyers and those with a lot of credit card debt, since movement in the Fed’s overnight lending rate influences rates — directly or indirectly — on consumer financial products (e.g., credit cards, bank loans and mortgages).",2024-05-21 Facebook and Instagram probed over fears they may be too addictive for children,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/16/tech/europe-investigation-meta-child-safety/index.html," Published 8:54 AM EDT, Thu May 16, 2024 ","The European Union is worried that Meta is failing to protect children on its platforms, Facebook and Instagram, and has launched a formal investigation that could result in a hefty fine. The probe is the latest evidence that regulators are increasingly focussing on the harmful impact of Meta’s platforms — and other social media — on young users, including by encouraging addictive behavior. The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, will consider whether Meta (META) has complied with its obligations under the Digital Services Act (DSA), the bloc’s sweeping new law for online platforms. The legislation requires online platforms to put in place measures to protect children, including by preventing them from accessing inappropriate content and ensuring a high level of privacy and safety. Non-compliance could result in companies being fined as much as 6% of their global revenue or being forced to change their software. The European Commission is concerned that Facebook’s and Instagram’s online interfaces “may exploit the weaknesses and inexperience of minors and cause addictive behavior,” it said in a statement Thursday. “The Commission is also concerned about age assurance and verification methods put in place by Meta,” it added, noting that these may not be effective. In a statement shared with CNN, a spokesperson for Meta responded: “We want young people to have safe, age-appropriate experiences online and have spent a decade developing more than 50 tools and policies designed to protect them. This is a challenge the whole industry is facing, and we look forward to sharing details of our work with the European Commission.” A report the company submitted to the European Commission last September, detailing how its platforms protect minors, was not enough to assuage regulators’ concerns. “We are not convinced that (Meta) has done enough to comply with the DSA obligations to mitigate the risks of negative effects to the physical and mental health of young Europeans,” Commissioner Thierry Breton, said in the statement. “We are sparing no effort to protect our children.” Meta has faced growing scrutiny over the impact of its platforms on young users in recent years. The social media giant has been sued by various US school districts and state attorney generals in lawsuits related to youth mental health, child safety and privacy. Earlier this month, an investigation by the New Mexico attorney general into the potential dangers of Meta’s platforms resulted in the arrests of three men charged with attempted sexual abuse of children. Meta has also been frequently caught in the crosshairs of EU regulators, including over its handling of advertising by scammers and foreign election meddlers ahead of upcoming EU elections, as well as over disinformation and illegal content on its platforms linked to the war in Gaza.",CNN,16/05/2024,"['The European Union is worried that Meta is failing to protect children on its platforms, Facebook and Instagram, and has launched a formal investigation that could result in a hefty fine.', 'The probe is the latest evidence that regulators are increasingly focussing on the harmful impact of Meta’s platforms — and other social media — on young users, including by encouraging addictive behavior.', 'The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, will consider whether Meta (META) has complied with its obligations under the Digital Services Act (DSA), the bloc’s sweeping new law for online platforms.', 'The legislation requires online platforms to put in place measures to protect children, including by preventing them from accessing inappropriate content and ensuring a high level of privacy and safety.', 'Non-compliance could result in companies being fined as much as 6% of their global revenue or being forced to change their software.', 'The European Commission is concerned that Facebook’s and Instagram’s online interfaces “may exploitthe weaknesses and inexperience of minorsand causeaddictive behavior,” it said in a statement Thursday.', '“The Commission is also concerned about age assurance and verification methods put in place by Meta,” it added, noting that these may not be effective.', 'In a statement shared with CNN, a spokesperson for Meta responded: “We want young people to have safe, age-appropriate experiences online and have spent a decade developing more than 50 tools and policies designed to protect them.', 'This is a challenge the whole industry is facing, and we look forward to sharing details of our work with the European Commission.”', 'A report the company submitted to the European Commission last September, detailing how its platforms protect minors, was not enough to assuage regulators’ concerns.', '“We are not convinced that (Meta) has done enough to comply with the DSA obligations to mitigate the risks of negative effects to the physical and mental health of young Europeans,” Commissioner Thierry Breton, said in the statement. “', 'We are sparing no effort to protect our children.”', 'Meta has faced growing scrutiny over the impact of its platforms on young users in recent years.', 'The social media giant has been sued by various US school districts and state attorney generals in lawsuits related to youth mental health, child safety and privacy.', 'Earlier this month, an investigation by the New Mexico attorney general into the potential dangers of Meta’s platforms resulted in the arrests of three men charged with attempted sexual abuse of children.', 'Meta has also been frequently caught in the crosshairs of EU regulators, including over its handling of advertising by scammers and foreign election meddlers ahead of upcoming EU elections, as well as over disinformation and illegal content on its platforms linked to the war in Gaza.']",0.0034252227352226,"In a statement shared with CNN, a spokesperson for Meta responded: “We want young people to have safe, age-appropriate experiences online and have spent a decade developing more than 50 tools and policies designed to protect them.","Earlier this month, an investigation by the New Mexico attorney general into the potential dangers of Meta’s platforms resulted in the arrests of three men charged with attempted sexual abuse of children.",-0.5164994522929192,"“We are not convinced that (Meta) has done enough to comply with the DSA obligations to mitigate the risks of negative effects to the physical and mental health of young Europeans,” Commissioner Thierry Breton, said in the statement. “","The European Union is worried that Meta is failing to protect children on its platforms, Facebook and Instagram, and has launched a formal investigation that could result in a hefty fine.",2024-05-21 OpenAI’s wild week. How the Sam Altman story unfolded,https://edition.cnn.com/2023/11/22/tech/openai-sam-altman-chaos-explained-intl-hnk/index.html," Updated 3:32 PM EST, Wed November 22, 2023 ","In a year of wild tech stories that has seen Elon Musk transform Twitter, cryptocurrency exchange FTX collapse and Silicon Valley Bank implode, this week’s whiplash-inducing turmoil at OpenAI is among the most captivating. Sam Altman — the leader of one of the world’s most influential AI companies, OpenAI, and perhaps the most visible figure in the fledgling industry — was fired Friday night by the startup’s directors in a surprise move. Less than five days later, he’s back as the company’s CEO, now with a board that is, in theory, more supportive of his vision. The series of extraordinary events unfolded just days after OpenAI held its first-ever developer conference, where it laid out new, commercialized versions of its technology, including the option to customize its ChatGPT AI chatbot. If you’re just catching up, here’s what you missed from a week so incredible you’d be forgiven for thinking the script could have been written by an early version of OpenAI’s ChatGPT. Around 3 p.m. ET, Altman joined a Google Meet call with most of OpenAI’s board that had been convened by fellow co-founder and OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, during which Altman was fired and told that the news would soon be made public. Within the next half hour, the board also informed Greg Brockman, another co-founder and OpenAI president, that he would be removed from the board. Around 3:30 p.m. ET, OpenAI publicly announced that it had fired Altman over concerns that he was not always truthful with the board. The board said Mira Murati, the company’s chief technology officer, would become interim CEO. OpenAI’s strategic partners, including its biggest financial backer Microsoft, were also reportedly informed of Altman’s ouster just minutes before the board’s announcement. Hours after being fired, Altman posted on X that he “loved working with such talented people” and that he would have “more to say about what’s next later.” Brockman promptly quit. “Please don’t spend any time being concerned. We will be fine,” Brockman said in a Friday post on X. “Greater things coming soon.” A key factor in the CEO’s firing was tension between Altman, who favored developing AI more aggressively, and members of the OpenAI board, who wanted to move more cautiously, according to CNN contributor Kara Swisher, who spoke to sources knowledgeable about the unfolding events. Within 24 hours of Altman being fired, reports emerged that he and other ex-OpenAI loyalists were mulling plans for their own venture. OpenAI’s board was also reportedly having second thoughts and considering asking the ousted CEO to return. By Sunday afternoon, Altman was back at OpenAI’s headquarters — this time with a guest badge — to negotiate his potential return. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella reportedly mediated the discussion. A 5 p.m. PT deadline was reportedly set for the board to agree to Altman’s demands, including adding a seat for Microsoft, and reinstating him as CEO. But those talks broke down. As Sunday turned into Monday, Nadella tweeted that Altman, along with Brockman, would join Microsoft to run a new AI research group. At OpenAI, the group found a new interim CEO: Emmett Shear, the former CEO of Amazon’s streaming service, Twitch. Murati would return to her role as OpenAI’s chief technology officer. In a post on X early Monday, Shear, who left his role at Twitch in March, described the chance to join OpenAI as “a once-in-a-lifetime” opportunity. He added that the company would hire an independent investigator to report on what happened in the lead-up to Altman’s firing. But OpenAI employees were not convinced. More than 500 staffers signed an open letter calling on the company’s board to resign and reinstate Altman and Brockman. They also threatened to follow the co-founders to Microsoft if their demands were not met. Altman posted on X, saying, “we have more unity and commitment and focus than ever before. we are all going to work together some way or other, and i’m so excited. one team, one mission.” The drama was far from over. The Verge reported Monday afternoon that Altman and Brockman could still return to OpenAI if the board members who fired him resign. And Nadella, speaking to CNBC, said he was “open to both options” when asked whether Altman would actually join Microsoft. “Look, that is for the OpenAI board and management and the employees to choose,” Nadella said. “We chose to explicitly partner with OpenAI and we want to continue to do so, and obviously, that depends on the people of OpenAI staying there or coming to Microsoft.” Altman was reinstated late Tuesday as OpenAI’s CEO, the company said on X. “We have reached an agreement in principle for Sam Altman to return to OpenAI as CEO with a new initial board,” the company said, adding that the board will be chaired by Bret Taylor, a former co-CEO of Salesforce. Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers will also join the board, alongside existing director, Quora CEO Adam D’Angelo. “We are collaborating to figure out the details,” it said. In his own post on X, formerly Twitter, Altman wrote that he is “looking forward” to returning to OpenAI and building on the firm’s “strong partnership” with Microsoft. It’s unclear how Shear will be affected by Altman’s return. Posting on X, Shear wrote: “I am deeply pleased by this result, after (some) 72 very intense hours of work … I’m glad to have been a part of the solution.” Brockman is also returning to OpenAI, according to his post on X. Ultimately, Microsoft and Altman appear to be the big winners from the dust-up: Altman will continue leading the firm he helped to found. And Microsoft has wrested more control over the company it has backed with billions to bolster its ambitions in developing AI. “We are encouraged by the changes to the OpenAI board,” Nadella said on X. “We believe this is a first essential step on a path to more stable, well-informed, and effective governance.”",CNN,22/11/2023,"['In a year of wild tech stories that has seen Elon Musk transform Twitter, cryptocurrency exchange FTX collapse and Silicon Valley Bank implode, this week’s whiplash-inducing turmoil at OpenAI is among the most captivating.', 'Sam Altman — the leader of one of the world’s most influential AI companies, OpenAI, and perhaps themost visible figure in the fledgling industry — was fired Friday night by the startup’s directors in a surprise move.', 'Less than five days later, he’s back as the company’s CEO, now with a board that is, in theory, more supportive of his vision.', 'The series of extraordinary events unfolded just days after OpenAI held itsfirst-ever developer conference, where it laid out new, commercialized versions of its technology, including the option to customize its ChatGPT AI chatbot.', 'If you’re just catching up, here’s what you missed from a week so incredible you’d be forgiven for thinking the script could have been written by an early version of OpenAI’s ChatGPT.', 'Around 3 p.m. ET, Altman joined a Google Meet call with most of OpenAI’s board that had been convened by fellow co-founder and OpenAI chief scientistIlya Sutskever, during which Altman was fired and told that the news would soon be made public.', 'Within the next half hour, the board also informed Greg Brockman, another co-founder and OpenAI president, that he would be removed from the board.', 'Around 3:30 p.m. ET, OpenAI publicly announced that it had fired Altman over concerns that he was not always truthful with the board.', 'The board said Mira Murati, the company’s chief technology officer, would become interim CEO.', 'OpenAI’s strategic partners, including its biggest financial backer Microsoft, were also reportedly informed of Altman’s ouster just minutes before the board’s announcement.', 'Hours after being fired, Altman posted on X that he “loved working with such talented people” and that he would have “more to say about what’s next later.”', 'Brockman promptly quit. “', 'Please don’t spend any time being concerned.', 'We will be fine,” Brockmansaid in a Friday poston X. “Greater things coming soon.”', 'A key factor in the CEO’s firing wastension between Altman, who favored developing AImore aggressively, and members of the OpenAI board, who wanted to move more cautiously,according to CNN contributor Kara Swisher,who spoke to sources knowledgeable about the unfolding events.', 'Within 24 hours of Altman being fired, reports emerged that he and other ex-OpenAI loyalists were mulling plans for their own venture.', 'OpenAI’s board was also reportedly having second thoughts and considering asking the ousted CEO to return.', 'By Sunday afternoon, Altman wasback at OpenAI’s headquarters— this time with a guest badge — to negotiate his potential return.', 'Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella reportedly mediated the discussion.', 'A 5 p.m. PT deadline was reportedly set for the board to agree to Altman’s demands, including adding a seat for Microsoft, and reinstating him as CEO.', 'But those talks broke down.', 'As Sunday turned into Monday, Nadella tweeted that Altman, along with Brockman, would join Microsoft to run a new AI research group.', 'At OpenAI, the group found a new interim CEO: Emmett Shear, the former CEO of Amazon’s streaming service, Twitch.', 'Murati would return to her role as OpenAI’s chief technology officer.', 'In a post on X early Monday, Shear, who left his role at Twitch in March, described the chance to join OpenAI as “a once-in-a-lifetime” opportunity.', 'He added that the company would hire an independent investigator to report on what happened in the lead-up to Altman’s firing.', 'But OpenAI employees were not convinced.', 'More than 500 staffers signed an open letter calling on the company’s board to resign and reinstate Altman and Brockman.', 'They also threatened to follow the co-founders to Microsoft if their demands were not met.', 'Altman posted on X, saying, “we have more unity and commitment and focus than ever before.', 'we are all going to work together some way or other, and i’m so excited.', 'one team, one mission.”', 'The drama was far from over.', 'The Verge reported Monday afternoonthat Altman and Brockman could still return to OpenAI if the board members who fired him resign.', 'And Nadella, speaking to CNBC, said he was “open to both options” when asked whether Altman would actually join Microsoft.', '“Look, that is for the OpenAI board and management and the employees to choose,” Nadella said. “', 'We chose to explicitly partner with OpenAI and we want to continue to do so, and obviously, that depends on the people of OpenAI staying there or coming to Microsoft.”', 'Altmanwas reinstated late Tuesday as OpenAI’s CEO, the company said on X. “We have reached an agreement in principle for Sam Altman to return to OpenAI as CEO with a new initial board,” the company said, adding that the board will be chaired by Bret Taylor, a former co-CEO of Salesforce.', 'Former Treasury SecretaryLarry Summers will also join the board, alongside existing director, Quora CEOAdam D’Angelo.', '“We are collaborating to figure out the details,” it said.', 'In his own post on X, formerly Twitter, Altmanwrotethat he is “looking forward” to returning to OpenAI and building on the firm’s “strong partnership” with Microsoft.', 'It’s unclear how Shear will be affected by Altman’s return.', 'Posting on X, Shear wrote:“I am deeply pleased by this result, after (some) 72 very intense hours of work … I’m glad to have been a part of the solution.”', 'Brockman is also returning to OpenAI, according to hispost on X. Ultimately, Microsoft and Altman appear to be the big winners from the dust-up: Altman will continue leading the firm he helped to found.', 'And Microsoft has wrested more control over the company it has backed with billions to bolster its ambitions in developing AI.', '“We are encouraged by the changes to the OpenAI board,” Nadellasaidon X. “We believe this is a first essential step on a path to more stable, well-informed, and effective governance.”']",0.062777217389235,"“We are encouraged by the changes to the OpenAI board,” Nadellasaidon X. “We believe this is a first essential step on a path to more stable, well-informed, and effective governance.”","Around 3:30 p.m. ET, OpenAI publicly announced that it had fired Altman over concerns that he was not always truthful with the board.",0.549453833273479,And Microsoft has wrested more control over the company it has backed with billions to bolster its ambitions in developing AI.,"Sam Altman — the leader of one of the world’s most influential AI companies, OpenAI, and perhaps themost visible figure in the fledgling industry — was fired Friday night by the startup’s directors in a surprise move.",2024-05-21 Top soccer clubs are using an AI-powered app to scout future stars,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/01/tech/aiscout-app-soccer-scouting-spc-intl/index.html," Published 7:14 AM EST, Fri March 1, 2024 ","A London-based technology company is looking to “democratize” talent-identification and scouting in soccer using a mobile app. Free to download and available globally, the aiScout app allows aspiring soccer stars to enter virtual trials for professional clubs by uploading self-recorded footage of themselves completing a series of drills. It offers 75 exercises, designed to test a range of skills, with videos showing users how to complete them. Performances are automatically scored by artificial intelligence (AI) technology. The data can then be accessed by clubs, allowing their scouts to peruse scores for viable talent, honing their search with a variety of filters; from age and gender to position on the pitch. The app currently has two English Premier League (EPL) partners, Chelsea and Burnley, and clubs can tailor their in-app trials to meet specific needs and set their own benchmarks by having their academy players complete the same drills. “We’re putting that data up front to make better use of [the scouts’] time,” said Richard Felton-Thomas, chief operating officer of ai.io, the company behind the app. “To say [to scouts], ‘Go over to this place today because there’s three players in that game that are all actually beating your Chelsea standard’ — that’s going to be the best use of your time.’” It already appears to be working for some. Ben Greenwood had never had a trial with a professional club until he downloaded the app in 2019. After uploading footage of himself, the 17-year-old landed a trial with Chelsea, becoming the first user of the app to get a trial with a pro club. He signed a contract with EPL team Bournemouth in 2021. Having beta-tested in with players spanning 125 countries, Greenwood among them, 135 players have been trialed or signed by pro clubs or national teams through the app — which fully launched in September 2023 — according to Felton-Thomas. Just over 100,000 players make up the current database, but with over 100 clubs lined up to join Chelsea and Burnley, as well as a multi-year partnership with Major League Soccer in the US announced last May, Felton-Thomas projects user numbers to surge into the millions as the operation ramps up this year. Felton-Thomas said the “lion’s share” of its income comes from charging clubs a license fee to run the platform. Annual fees vary depending on the size of the club and the tools they require, ranging from six figures for “tier one” sides like Chelsea, to thousands of pounds for clubs lower down the footballing pyramid. The use of smart technology in sport continues to expand, including AI commentary tools and wearable tech for elite athletes. The global market for sports analytics, valued at $2.7 billion in 2023, is projected to grow 22% by the end of the decade, according to market research firm Grand View Research. Should soccer talent scouts be concerned about being edged out by the arrival of AI in their industry? For Felton-Thomas, new technologies can co-exist with traditional methods. “It’s more about evolution than revolution,” Felton-Thomas explained. “We can’t tell you when that player’s actually in that match, how does he deal with adversity? What happens when he’s 2-0 down? What happens when someone’s shouting at him? What happens when he’s just made a massive mistake?” “We’ve got the ability to just augment real people to do their jobs better and faster, which then gives an opportunity to the player through the AI, but you’re still actually just connecting them to the human on the other side, which is the club and the scout.” While football remains ai.io’s primary focus, the company is looking into opportunities in other sports to launch in the coming years. Further ahead, it may branch out beyond sports. “You think about the notion that you can be at home and analyze your movements, and how this could spin into health care, physical assessments for military disciplines and emergency services,” Felton-Thomas told CNN.",CNN,01/03/2024,"['A London-based technology company is looking to “democratize” talent-identification and scouting in soccer using a mobile app.', 'Free to download and available globally, the aiScout app allows aspiring soccer stars to enter virtual trials for professional clubs by uploading self-recorded footage of themselves completing a series of drills.', 'It offers 75 exercises, designed to test a range of skills, with videos showing users how to complete them.', 'Performances are automatically scored by artificial intelligence (AI) technology.', 'The data can then be accessed by clubs, allowing their scouts to peruse scores for viable talent, honing their search with a variety of filters; from age and gender to position on the pitch.', 'The app currently has two English Premier League (EPL) partners, Chelsea and Burnley, and clubs can tailor their in-app trials to meet specific needs and set their own benchmarks by having their academy players complete the same drills.', '“We’re putting that data up front to make better use of [the scouts’] time,” said Richard Felton-Thomas, chief operating officer of ai.io, the company behind the app.', '“To say [to scouts], ‘Go over to this place today because there’s three players in that game that are all actually beating your Chelsea standard’ — that’s going to be the best use of your time.’”', 'It already appears to be working for some.', 'Ben Greenwood had never had a trial with a professional club until he downloaded the app in 2019.', 'After uploading footage of himself, the 17-year-old landed a trial with Chelsea, becoming the first user of the app to get a trial with a pro club.', 'He signed a contractwith EPL team Bournemouthin 2021.', 'Having beta-tested in with players spanning 125 countries, Greenwood among them, 135 players have been trialed or signed by pro clubs or national teams through the app — which fully launched in September 2023 — according to Felton-Thomas.', 'Just over 100,000 players make up the current database, but with over 100 clubs lined up to join Chelsea and Burnley, as well as a multi-year partnership with Major League Soccer in the US announced last May, Felton-Thomas projects user numbers to surge into the millions as the operation ramps up this year.', 'Felton-Thomas said the “lion’s share” of its income comes from charging clubs a license fee to run the platform.', 'Annual fees vary depending on the size of the club and the tools they require, ranging from six figures for “tier one” sides like Chelsea, to thousands of pounds for clubs lower down the footballing pyramid.', 'The use of smart technology in sport continues to expand, includingAI commentary tools and wearable tech for elite athletes.', 'The global market for sports analytics, valued at$2.7 billionin 2023, is projected to grow 22% by the end of the decade, according to market research firm Grand View Research.', 'Should soccer talent scouts be concerned about being edged out by the arrival of AI in their industry?', 'For Felton-Thomas, new technologies can co-exist with traditional methods.', '“It’s more about evolution than revolution,” Felton-Thomas explained.', '“We can’t tell you when that player’s actually in that match, how does he deal with adversity?', 'What happens when he’s 2-0 down?', 'What happens when someone’s shouting at him?', 'What happens when he’s just made a massive mistake?”', '“We’ve got the ability to just augment real people to do their jobs better and faster, which then gives an opportunity to the player through the AI, but you’re still actually just connecting them to the human on the other side, which is the club and the scout.”', 'While football remains ai.io’s primary focus, the company is looking into opportunities in other sports to launch in the coming years.', 'Further ahead, it may branch out beyond sports.', '“You think about the notion that you can be at home and analyze your movements, and how this could spin into health care, physical assessments for military disciplines and emergency services,” Felton-Thomas told CNN.']",0.2022322827681825,"The global market for sports analytics, valued at$2.7 billionin 2023, is projected to grow 22% by the end of the decade, according to market research firm Grand View Research.","“We can’t tell you when that player’s actually in that match, how does he deal with adversity?",0.6922526359558105,"The global market for sports analytics, valued at$2.7 billionin 2023, is projected to grow 22% by the end of the decade, according to market research firm Grand View Research.",Should soccer talent scouts be concerned about being edged out by the arrival of AI in their industry?,2024-05-21 Two former MIT students charged with stealing $25 million of crypto in 12 seconds,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/16/investing/mit-crypto-hack/index.html," Published 11:17 AM EDT, Thu May 16, 2024 ","Two brothers who studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology were arrested on Wednesday on US charges that they carried out a cutting-edge scheme to exploit the Ethereum blockchain’s integrity and steal $25 million worth of cryptocurrency. Federal prosecutors in Manhattan called the scheme perpetrated by Anton Peraire-Bueno, 24, and James Peraire-Bueno, 28, “novel” and said the case marked the first time that such a fraud had ever been the subject of U.S. criminal charges. Authorities said they executed their elaborate heist in April 2023, stealing $25 million from traders in just 12 seconds by fraudulently gaining access to pending transactions and altering the movement of cryptocurrency. “As we allege, the defendants’ scheme calls the very integrity of the blockchain into question,” U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said. An indictment charged them with conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit money laundering. Anton Peraire-Bueno was arrested in Boston, while James Peraire-Bueno was arrested in New York. Their lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Both brothers had attended Cambridge, Massachusetts-based MIT, where according to prosecutors they studied computer science and math and developed the skills and education they relied upon to carry out their fraud. The indictment alleged that for months, the Peraire-Bueno brothers plotted to manipulate and tamper with the protocols used to validate transactions for inclusion on the Ethereum blockchain, a public ledger that records each cryptocurrency transaction. Prosecutors said they did so by exploiting a vulnerability in the code of software called MEV-boost that is used by most Ethereum network “validators,” who are responsible for checking that new transactions are valid before they are added to the blockchain. Prosecutors said that after carrying out the heist, the brothers rejected requests to return the funds and instead took steps to launder and hide the stolen cryptocurrency.",CNN,16/05/2024,"['Twobrotherswho studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology were arrested on Wednesday on USchargesthat they carried out a cutting-edge scheme to exploit the Ethereum blockchain’s integrity and steal $25 million worth of cryptocurrency.', 'Federal prosecutors in Manhattan called the scheme perpetrated by Anton Peraire-Bueno, 24, and James Peraire-Bueno, 28, “novel” and said the case marked the first time that such a fraud had ever been the subject of U.S. criminalcharges.', 'Authorities said they executed their elaborate heist in April 2023, stealing $25 million from traders in just 12 seconds by fraudulently gaining access to pending transactions and altering the movement of cryptocurrency.', '“As we allege, the defendants’ scheme calls the very integrity of the blockchain into question,” U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said.', 'Anindictmentcharged them with conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit money laundering.', 'Anton Peraire-Bueno was arrested in Boston, while James Peraire-Bueno was arrested in New York.', 'Their lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment.', 'Bothbrothershad attended Cambridge, Massachusetts-based MIT, where according to prosecutors they studied computer science and math and developed the skills and education they relied upon to carry out their fraud.', 'The indictment alleged that for months, the Peraire-Buenobrothersplotted to manipulate and tamper with the protocols used to validate transactions for inclusion on the Ethereum blockchain, a public ledger that records each cryptocurrency transaction.', 'Prosecutors said they did so by exploiting a vulnerability in the code of software called MEV-boost that is used by most Ethereum network “validators,” who are responsible for checking that new transactions are valid before they are added to the blockchain.', 'Prosecutors said that after carrying out the heist, thebrothersrejected requests to return the funds and instead took steps to launder and hide the stolen cryptocurrency.']",-0.2908915216605268,"“As we allege, the defendants’ scheme calls the very integrity of the blockchain into question,” U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said.","Anindictmentcharged them with conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit money laundering.",-0.8155887126922607,,"“As we allege, the defendants’ scheme calls the very integrity of the blockchain into question,” U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said.",2024-05-21 Cazoo: What went wrong for the online used car retailer?,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cjq55333xg9o,2024-05-21T15:25:24.710Z,"Online used car retailer Cazoo has fallen into administration, after cutting hundreds of jobs as part of a big restructuring. Cazoo became popular during the Covid pandemic when restrictions forced car buyers to browse and make their purchases online. But the loss-making company has been struggling to raise money from investors, and in March changed its model from being a dealer, where it bought and sold cars itself, to a marketplace where consumers can buy and sell cars. That move has led to 728 redundancies, administrators Teneo said, after being appointed to try to find a buyer for the business. Teneo said the firm's 208 remaining staff would be retained for the time being during the administration process. It is a dramatic fall from grace for the business, which surged in popularity during the pandemic and subsequent lockdowns. Back in 2021, if you hadn't used Cazoo, you probably would have seen or heard of it. Its branding was splashed everywhere, with the company sponsoring Premier League football teams Aston Villa and Everton, as well as a host of other major sporting events like darts and snooker. Cazoo was different to other more traditional car dealers - it was a tech business trying to shake up a well-established order. The platform allowed shoppers to buy, part-exchange and finance vehicles entirely online. People could order while sitting on the sofa, and the vehicle would be delivered to their home in as little as 72 hours, with a seven-day returns policy. Launched in late 2019, the pandemic massively boosted the firm's fortunes. As well as Covid restrictions meaning people could only buy second-hand cars online, a worldwide microchip shortage that disrupted new vehicle manufacturing also played into Cazoo's hands as used car prices soared. The environment fuelled an astonishing increase in the company's value. When it listed on the New York Stock Exchange in September 2021, it was valued at a whopping $7bn (£5bn). Now, its valuation has dropped to just $30m. In November 2021, Cazoo's founder Alex Chesterman - who also launched property website Zoopla and LoveFilm, a predecessor of Netflix - told the BBC that gaining just a small percentage of the market would create an ""enormous business"", arguing that Cazoo offered customers a simpler experience, greater choice and transparency on price. The platform went on to launch in France, Germany, Spain and Portugal. At its peak, Cazoo employed 4,500 people in 2021. But despite the mission to transform the car-selling industry, the feel-good factor surrounding Cazoo began to fade. One of the key people behind Cazoo's strong marketing campaign was Andrew Francos, who joined the company shortly before it launched. He says the early days were ""really exciting times"", but believes the firm expanded too quickly. ""Looking back I think Europe was a distraction,"" he says. ""I remember saying to someone, 'Are we going too soon?' I was probably naïve to just buy into the vision because I believed in it."" Mr Francos left Cazoo in October 2022, and admits he felt like he was departing a sinking ship, but adds: ""I did also think they would turn it around."" The business has never made a profit. While this is not unusual for a start-up - in fact, Mr Chesterman said he expected this to be the case for two or three years after going public - its losses grew, In 2022 it posted a loss of £704m, up from £544m the year before, and in December last year it restructured debts of $630m. According to Catherine Faiers, chief operating officer at car marketplace giant Auto Trader, while Covid saw a shift to online purchasing becoming the norm for many goods, ""cars are just fundamentally different to other things you buy"". She says the majority of UK consumers prefer a blended approach of researching online, but then seeing the car and speaking to a dealer in person before handing over their cash. ""Buying a car is a bit like buying a house. It's the second-most valuable thing that most people buy. We name our cars. When you ask people why they own a car it reads a bit like the American constitution - 'I own a car because it gives me freedom, it gives me independence, it's empowering,'"" Ms Faiers says. Kevin Gaskell, former managing director of Porsche, Lamborghini and BMW, says Cazoo's problems were down to a ""simple fact of trying to get a foothold in a very sophisticated, very established market"". ""They believed that they could come in and become an online retail business and provide a full service but car dealers are already doing that. There's nothing new in the model that they developed,"" he told the BBC's Today programme. ""They've spent a huge amount of money developing the brand. In terms of their revenue, it has got nowhere near where they expected it to be."" Mr Chesterman stepped aside as chief executive in January 2023 and perhaps the writing was on the wall for Cazoo when he left the company altogether in December. His replacement, Paul Whitehead, stepped down in March this year - the same time that Cazoo announced it had sold off its remaining stock and switched to an online marketplace model, allowing car dealers to list their own stock on its platform, and wound down its European business. The company has said it explored ""strategic alternatives"" to insolvency, including selling off parts of its business, as it struggled to raise cash from investors, but no buyer came forward. When contacted by the BBC for comment on Cazoo's downfall, Mr Chesterman said he had had no involvement with the company for more than 18 months and declined to comment further. Philip Nothard, insight and strategy director at Cox Automotive, says Cazoo did force many of the established players to adapt, but as supply problems and microchip shortages have dissipated, it allowed others to catch up. ""They came in quick, they came in heavy, they came in with a concept that on the face of it worked in many ways,"" he adds ""[But] in time, established retailers could offer what Cazoo were offering. They could offer that digital omnichannel, e-commerce experience. And essentially they had a physical infrastructure already in place."" ",BBC,21/05/2024,"['Online used car retailer Cazoo has fallen into administration, after cutting hundreds of jobs as part of a big restructuring.', 'Cazoo became popular during the Covid pandemic when restrictions forced car buyers to browse and make their purchases online.', 'But the loss-making company has been struggling to raise money from investors, and in March changed its model from being a dealer, where it bought and sold cars itself, to a marketplace where consumers can buy and sell cars.', 'That move has led to 728 redundancies, administrators Teneo said, after being appointed to try to find a buyer for the business.', ""Teneo said the firm's 208 remaining staff would be retained for the time being during the administration process."", 'It is a dramatic fall from grace for the business, which surged in popularity during the pandemic and subsequent lockdowns.', ""Back in 2021, if you hadn't used Cazoo, you probably would have seen or heard of it."", 'Its branding was splashed everywhere, with the company sponsoring Premier League football teams Aston Villa and Everton, as well as a host of other major sporting events like darts and snooker.', 'Cazoo was different to other more traditional car dealers - it was a tech business trying to shake up a well-established order.', 'The platform allowed shoppers to buy, part-exchange and finance vehicles entirely online.', 'People could order while sitting on the sofa, and the vehicle would be delivered to their home in as little as 72 hours, with a seven-day returns policy.', ""Launched in late 2019, the pandemic massively boosted the firm's fortunes."", ""As well as Covid restrictions meaning people could only buy second-hand cars online, a worldwide microchip shortage that disrupted new vehicle manufacturing also played into Cazoo's hands as used car prices soared."", ""The environment fuelled an astonishing increase in the company's value."", 'When it listed on the New York Stock Exchange in September 2021, it was valued at a whopping $7bn (£5bn).', 'Now, its valuation has dropped to just $30m. In November 2021, Cazoo\'s founder Alex Chesterman - who also launched property website Zoopla and LoveFilm, a predecessor of Netflix - told the BBC that gaining just a small percentage of the market would create an ""enormous business"", arguing that Cazoo offered customers a simpler experience, greater choice and transparency on price.', 'The platform went on to launch in France, Germany, Spain and Portugal.', 'At its peak, Cazoo employed 4,500 people in 2021.', 'But despite the mission to transform the car-selling industry, the feel-good factor surrounding Cazoo began to fade.', ""One of the key people behind Cazoo's strong marketing campaign was Andrew Francos, who joined the company shortly before it launched."", 'He says the early days were ""really exciting times"", but believes the firm expanded too quickly. ""', 'Looking back I think Europe was a distraction,"" he says. ""', ""I remember saying to someone, 'Are we going too soon?'"", 'I was probably naïve to just buy into the vision because I believed in it.""', 'Mr Francos left Cazoo in October 2022, and admits he felt like he was departing a sinking ship, but adds: ""I did also think they would turn it around.""', 'The business has never made a profit.', 'While this is not unusual for a start-up - in fact, Mr Chesterman said he expected this to be the case for two or three years after going public - its losses grew, In 2022 it posted a loss of £704m, up from £544m the year before, and in December last year it restructured debts of $630m. According to Catherine Faiers, chief operating officer at car marketplace giant Auto Trader, while Covid saw a shift to online purchasing becoming the norm for many goods, ""cars are just fundamentally different to other things you buy"".', 'She says the majority of UK consumers prefer a blended approach of researching online, but then seeing the car and speaking to a dealer in person before handing over their cash. ""', 'Buying a car is a bit like buying a house.', ""It's the second-most valuable thing that most people buy."", 'We name our cars.', 'When you ask people why they own a car it reads a bit like the American constitution - \'I own a car because it gives me freedom, it gives me independence, it\'s empowering,\'"" Ms Faiers says.', 'Kevin Gaskell, former managing director of Porsche, Lamborghini and BMW, says Cazoo\'s problems were down to a ""simple fact of trying to get a foothold in a very sophisticated, very established market"". ""', 'They believed that they could come in and become an online retail business and provide a full service but car dealers are already doing that.', 'There\'s nothing new in the model that they developed,"" he told the BBC\'s Today programme. ""', ""They've spent a huge amount of money developing the brand."", 'In terms of their revenue, it has got nowhere near where they expected it to be.""', 'Mr Chesterman stepped aside as chief executive in January 2023 and perhaps the writing was on the wall for Cazoo when he left the company altogether in December.', 'His replacement, Paul Whitehead, stepped down in March this year - the same time that Cazoo announced it had sold off its remaining stock and switched to an online marketplace model, allowing car dealers to list their own stock on its platform, and wound down its European business.', 'The company has said it explored ""strategic alternatives"" to insolvency, including selling off parts of its business, as it struggled to raise cash from investors, but no buyer came forward.', ""When contacted by the BBC for comment on Cazoo's downfall, Mr Chesterman said he had had no involvement with the company for more than 18 months and declined to comment further."", 'Philip Nothard, insight and strategy director at Cox Automotive, says Cazoo did force many of the established players to adapt, but as supply problems and microchip shortages have dissipated, it allowed others to catch up. ""', 'They came in quick, they came in heavy, they came in with a concept that on the face of it worked in many ways,"" he adds ""[But] in time, established retailers could offer what Cazoo were offering.', 'They could offer that digital omnichannel, e-commerce experience.', 'And essentially they had a physical infrastructure already in place.""']",0.0980329638428384,"When you ask people why they own a car it reads a bit like the American constitution - 'I own a car because it gives me freedom, it gives me independence, it's empowering,'"" Ms Faiers says.","But the loss-making company has been struggling to raise money from investors, and in March changed its model from being a dealer, where it bought and sold cars itself, to a marketplace where consumers can buy and sell cars.",-0.3573331758379936,"Launched in late 2019, the pandemic massively boosted the firm's fortunes.","As well as Covid restrictions meaning people could only buy second-hand cars online, a worldwide microchip shortage that disrupted new vehicle manufacturing also played into Cazoo's hands as used car prices soared.",2024-05-21 China trade: Beijing hits back at US and EU with plastics probe,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cw004vvkj1xo,2024-05-20T02:04:40.429Z,"China has launched an anti-dumping probe into imports of a widely used plastic from the US, EU, Taiwan and Japan. The announcement from the Ministry of Commerce that it will investigate imports of polyoxymethylene copolymer - which is used in electronics and cars - is a signal that China will hit back in its trade disputes with the US and Europe. It comes as China's trade rows with the US and the EU have deepened in recent months. Less than a week ago, Washington sharply increased tariffs on Chinese goods, including electric vehicles (EVs), solar panels and computer chips. The new US moves also expanded on sweeping border taxes that were imposed on Chinese goods under the Trump administration. In response, China's commerce ministry said the new moves would ""severely affect the atmosphere for bilateral cooperation"", and criticised what it characterised as the politicisation of economic issues. Ahead of the heavily-trailed White House announcement, a spokesperson for China's foreign ministry said it would ""take all necessary measures to safeguard its legitimate rights and interests"". Separately on Monday, China sanctioned three American defence firms over their sales of weapons to Taiwan, state media said. The announcement that General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, General Dynamics Land Systems, and Boeing Defense, Space & Security are barred from ""import and export"" business in China came as the self-ruled island inaugurated a new president. Senior executives of all three companies are banned from entering, working or living in China, the commerce ministry said. Meanwhile, Europe has launched a series of probes into Chinese imports. On Friday, the EU said it would launch an investigation into Chinese tinplate steel. And last month, Brussels said it was probing two Chinese solar panel makers, that it says benefit from government subsidies. The European Commission (EC), which oversees the EU's trade policies, has also given itself a 4 July deadline to decide whether to impose measures against imports of Chinese-made EVs. ",BBC,20/05/2024,"['China has launched an anti-dumping probe into imports of a widely used plastic from the US, EU, Taiwan and Japan.', 'The announcement from the Ministry of Commerce that it will investigate imports of polyoxymethylene copolymer - which is used in electronics and cars - is a signal that China will hit back in its trade disputes with the US and Europe.', ""It comes as China's trade rows with the US and the EU have deepened in recent months."", 'Less than a week ago, Washington sharply increased tariffs on Chinese goods, including electric vehicles (EVs), solar panels and computer chips.', 'The new US moves also expanded on sweeping border taxes that were imposed on Chinese goods under the Trump administration.', 'In response, China\'s commerce ministry said the new moves would ""severely affect the atmosphere for bilateral cooperation"", and criticised what it characterised as the politicisation of economic issues.', 'Ahead of the heavily-trailed White House announcement, a spokesperson for China\'s foreign ministry said it would ""take all necessary measures to safeguard its legitimate rights and interests"".', 'Separately on Monday, China sanctioned three American defence firms over their sales of weapons to Taiwan, state media said.', 'The announcement that General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, General Dynamics Land Systems, and Boeing Defense, Space & Security are barred from ""import and export"" business in China came as the self-ruled island inaugurated a new president.', 'Senior executives of all three companies are banned from entering, working or living in China, the commerce ministry said.', 'Meanwhile, Europe has launched a series of probes into Chinese imports.', 'On Friday, the EU said it would launch an investigation into Chinese tinplate steel.', 'And last month, Brussels said it was probing two Chinese solar panel makers, that it says benefit from government subsidies.', ""The European Commission (EC), which oversees the EU's trade policies, has also given itself a 4 July deadline to decide whether to impose measures against imports of Chinese-made EVs.""]",-0.0438265172752605,"The announcement that General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, General Dynamics Land Systems, and Boeing Defense, Space & Security are barred from ""import and export"" business in China came as the self-ruled island inaugurated a new president.","In response, China's commerce ministry said the new moves would ""severely affect the atmosphere for bilateral cooperation"", and criticised what it characterised as the politicisation of economic issues.",-0.6279851595560709,The new US moves also expanded on sweeping border taxes that were imposed on Chinese goods under the Trump administration.,"In response, China's commerce ministry said the new moves would ""severely affect the atmosphere for bilateral cooperation"", and criticised what it characterised as the politicisation of economic issues.",2024-05-21 How can countries deal with falling birth rates?,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c72p2vgd21no,2024-05-20T01:28:50.337Z,"The first thing you need to know about the so-called demographic timebomb facing countries such as the UK and US is to never call it that. With birth rates continuing to decline in both nations, it is tempting to use the timebomb term. However, it is greatly disliked by demographers, the experts that study population change. “Number one, I hate the phrase,” says Sarah Harper, professor of gerontology (the study of the impact of aging) at the University of Oxford. “I do not think there is a demographic timebomb, it is part of the demographic transition. We knew this was going to happen, and happen across the 21st Century. So, it is not unexpected, and we should have been preparing for this for some time.” However, the scale of the future problem is immense. For a country in the developed world to increase or maintain its population it needs a birth rate of 2.1 children per woman on average. This is known as the “replacement rate”. Yet the latest figures for England and Wales show that the average birth rate, also called the total fertility rate, declined to 1.49 children per woman in 2022, from 1.55 in 2021. The rate has been falling since 2010. It is a similar picture in Scotland and Northern Ireland, which record their data separately. Meanwhile, in the US the fertility rate fell last year to 1.62, a record low. Back in 1960 it was 3.65. “In fact, two thirds of the world’s countries now have childbirth rates below the replacement rate,” adds Prof Harper. “Japan is low, China is low, South Korea is the lowest in the world.” Population growth is really only limited to sub-Saharan Africa these days. But why the concern about falling birth rates? The economic problems they can cause are significant, as countries face the impact of both aging and declining populations, and a smaller workforce in relation to the number of pensioners. For example – where will a nation’s economic growth come from if companies cannot recruit enough workers? And how can a smaller workforce afford to pay for the pensions of a much larger retired population? Those are questions that make government economists wince. To try to increase birth rates, countries can make it easier for women to have children, by providing more generous childcare provision, such as tax breaks and extended, fully-paid maternity leave. In addition, companies could be compelled to offer new mums and dads more flexible working hours, and provide workplace creches. However, while such policies might slow the decline, they rarely reverse it. Put simply, the more women are educated, the more they work and save, the better their lives are. Many women would instead prefer not to take the hit to their earnings and career prospects that becoming a mother often causes. So they have fewer children, or none at all. There are basically two main ways in which a country can deal with a falling birth rate – you can keep your population heathier and employed for longer, or you can have large-scale immigration. Singapore is one of the fastest-ageing countries in the world, and it is going for the first option. “There is a lot of effort being put into raising the retirement age, training in middle life, and encouraging companies - which have to offer you re-employment up to the age of 69 - to hire older workers,” says Prof Angelique Chan. She is the inaugural executive director of Singapore’s Centre for Ageing Research & Education. By re-employment, Prof Chan means elderly workers being able to stay in work after they have reached retirement age, if they so wish. Currently the retirement age in Singapore is 63, but this is due to rise to 64 in 2026, and to 65 by 2030. By that year the age to which people in re-employment can stay in work is expected to have risen to 70. Prof Chan says that the Singaporean government is also increasing efforts to ensure that every citizen has a doctor “who must take care of you and monitor your condition, and make sure we have heathier cohorts who can continue to work”. She adds that Singapore is spending a huge amount of money “so we have the healthiest kind of population, giving people the opportunity to work [in their old age]”. In the US, Ronald Lee, emeritus professor of economics at the University of California, says that a growing number of elderly Americans are having to work to cover their living expenses. “If we look at the proportion of consumption of 65-year-olds and older in the USA that is funded by continuing to work, it is significantly higher than in other developed countries,” he says. Prof Lee adds that this is not a bad thing. “I think it is fundamental for the whole world, to get over the idea that older people are entitled to an indefinitely long period of leisure at the end of their life. “People are healthier, vigorous, cognitively sharper, and ready to go on at much older ages than used to be the case. I hope to see retirement ages rising well into the 70’s.” Currently, Americans only get a full social security pension from 66 years and two months. But that will gradually rise to 67. Prof Lee’s thoughts may not be very popular with many people, but economically it looks inevitable. As life expectancy increases it becomes increasingly difficult to afford ever longer retirements. Something has to give, and working longer is the obvious solution. There is, however, another answer to this problem, as Prof Harper makes clear - increased immigration. Yet this is obviously a hot political potato on both sides of the Atlantic. “Migration could easily solve the problem of lower birth rates from a demographic point of view,” she says. “There are political and policy issues, but demographically what we should be doing is allowing those countries with huge child-bearing rates, and with huge numbers of workers for maybe the next four decades, to be able to flow across the world and make up the slack.” We all know there are huge pressures against large-scale immigration, although even populist regimes often turn a blind eye to it when necessary. Elizabeth Kuiper, associate director of the European Policy Centre think tank, says Hungary is a case in point. Its government claims to have a zero-tolerance attitude to migrants, but “we know that while these countries will not admit it publicly, in sectors like care and health care they have developed unspoken strategies for selective migration”. The problem is, of course, that in most of the developed world immigration is nowhere near the level necessary to make up for an aging population, and yet it is already deeply unpopular. The demographic experts know something has to give – countries will need to make people work longer, or increase immigration, and probably both. But to do that needs political consensus, and politicians know that asking people to approve additional immigration, and the need to work for more years in later life, is not a vote winner. Have the wheels come off for Tesla? The rise of Sweden's super rich Why US economy is powering ahead of Europe's How Chinese firms are using Mexico as a backdoor to the US Ibiza locals living in cars as party island sees rents soar ",BBC,20/05/2024,"['The first thing you need to know about the so-called demographic timebomb facing countries such as the UK and US is to never call it that.', 'With birth rates continuing to decline in both nations, it is tempting to use the timebomb term.', 'However, it is greatly disliked by demographers, the experts that study population change. “', 'Number one, I hate the phrase,” says Sarah Harper, professor of gerontology (the study of the impact of aging) at the University of Oxford. “', 'I do not think there is a demographic timebomb, it is part of the demographic transition.', 'We knew this was going to happen, and happen across the 21st Century.', 'So, it is not unexpected, and we should have been preparing for this for some time.”', 'However, the scale of the future problem is immense.', 'For a country in the developed world to increase or maintain its population it needs a birth rate of 2.1 children per woman on average.', 'This is known as the “replacement rate”.', 'Yet the latest figures for England and Wales show that the average birth rate, also called the total fertility rate, declined to 1.49 children per woman in 2022, from 1.55 in 2021.', 'The rate has been falling since 2010.', 'It is a similar picture in Scotland and Northern Ireland, which record their data separately.', 'Meanwhile, in the US the fertility rate fell last year to 1.62, a record low.', 'Back in 1960 it was 3.65. “', 'In fact, two thirds of the world’s countries now have childbirth rates below the replacement rate,” adds Prof Harper. “', 'Japan is low, China is low, South Korea is the lowest in the world.”', 'Population growth is really only limited to sub-Saharan Africa these days.', 'But why the concern about falling birth rates?', 'The economic problems they can cause are significant, as countries face the impact of both aging and declining populations, and a smaller workforce in relation to the number of pensioners.', 'For example – where will a nation’s economic growth come from if companies cannot recruit enough workers?', 'And how can a smaller workforce afford to pay for the pensions of a much larger retired population?', 'Those are questions that make government economists wince.', 'To try to increase birth rates, countries can make it easier for women to have children, by providing more generous childcare provision, such as tax breaks and extended, fully-paid maternity leave.', 'In addition, companies could be compelled to offer new mums and dads more flexible working hours, and provide workplace creches.', 'However, while such policies might slow the decline, they rarely reverse it.', 'Put simply, the more women are educated, the more they work and save, the better their lives are.', 'Many women would instead prefer not to take the hit to their earnings and career prospects that becoming a mother often causes.', 'So they have fewer children, or none at all.', 'There are basically two main ways in which a country can deal with a falling birth rate – you can keep your population heathier and employed for longer, or you can have large-scale immigration.', 'Singapore is one of the fastest-ageing countries in the world, and it is going for the first option. “', 'There is a lot of effort being put into raising the retirement age, training in middle life, and encouraging companies - which have to offer you re-employment up to the age of 69 - to hire older workers,” says Prof Angelique Chan.', 'She is the inaugural executive director of Singapore’s Centre for Ageing Research & Education.', 'By re-employment, Prof Chan means elderly workers being able to stay in work after they have reached retirement age, if they so wish.', 'Currently the retirement age in Singapore is 63, but this is due to rise to 64 in 2026, and to 65 by 2030.', 'By that year the age to which people in re-employment can stay in work is expected to have risen to 70.', 'Prof Chan says that the Singaporean government is also increasing efforts to ensure that every citizen has a doctor “who must take care of you and monitor your condition, and make sure we have heathier cohorts who can continue to work”.', 'She adds that Singapore is spending a huge amount of money “so we have the healthiest kind of population, giving people the opportunity to work [in their old age]”.', 'In the US, Ronald Lee, emeritus professor of economics at the University of California, says that a growing number of elderly Americans are having to work to cover their living expenses. “', 'If we look at the proportion of consumption of 65-year-olds and older in the USA that is funded by continuing to work, it is significantly higher than in other developed countries,” he says.', 'Prof Lee adds that this is not a bad thing. “', 'I think it is fundamental for the whole world, to get over the idea that older people are entitled to an indefinitely long period of leisure at the end of their life. “', 'People are healthier, vigorous, cognitively sharper, and ready to go on at much older ages than used to be the case.', 'I hope to see retirement ages rising well into the 70’s.”', 'Currently, Americans only get a full social security pension from 66 years and two months.', 'But that will gradually rise to 67.', 'Prof Lee’s thoughts may not be very popular with many people, but economically it looks inevitable.', 'As life expectancy increases it becomes increasingly difficult to afford ever longer retirements.', 'Something has to give, and working longer is the obvious solution.', 'There is, however, another answer to this problem, as Prof Harper makes clear - increased immigration.', 'Yet this is obviously a hot political potato on both sides of the Atlantic. “', 'Migration could easily solve the problem of lower birth rates from a demographic point of view,” she says. “', 'There are political and policy issues, but demographically what we should be doing is allowing those countries with huge child-bearing rates, and with huge numbers of workers for maybe the next four decades, to be able to flow across the world and make up the slack.”', 'We all know there are huge pressures against large-scale immigration, although even populist regimes often turn a blind eye to it when necessary.', 'Elizabeth Kuiper, associate director of the European Policy Centre think tank, says Hungary is a case in point.', 'Its government claims to have a zero-tolerance attitude to migrants, but “we know that while these countries will not admit it publicly, in sectors like care and health care they have developed unspoken strategies for selective migration”.', 'The problem is, of course, that in most of the developed world immigration is nowhere near the level necessary to make up for an aging population, and yet it is already deeply unpopular.', 'The demographic experts know something has to give – countries will need to make people work longer, or increase immigration, and probably both.', 'But to do that needs political consensus, and politicians know that asking people to approve additional immigration, and the need to work for more years in later life, is not a vote winner.', 'Have the wheels come off for Tesla?', ""The rise of Sweden's super rich Why US economy is powering ahead of Europe's How Chinese firms are using Mexico as a backdoor to the US Ibiza locals living in cars as party island sees rents soar""]",0.0991835909144296,"Its government claims to have a zero-tolerance attitude to migrants, but “we know that while these countries will not admit it publicly, in sectors like care and health care they have developed unspoken strategies for selective migration”.","Japan is low, China is low, South Korea is the lowest in the world.”",0.0011644137316736,By that year the age to which people in re-employment can stay in work is expected to have risen to 70.,"Meanwhile, in the US the fertility rate fell last year to 1.62, a record low.",2024-05-21 Cuba laments collapse of iconic sugar industry,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-68935247,2024-05-18T00:34:58.000Z,"The men of the Yumuri sugar co-operative in Cuba have worked the cane fields around the city of Cienfuegos since they were old enough to wield a machete. Cutting cane is all Miguel Guzmán has ever known. He comes from a family of farm hands and started the tough, thankless work as a teenager. For hundreds of years, sugar was the mainstay of the Cuban economy. It was not just the island's main export but also the cornerstone of another national industry, rum. Older Cubans remember when the island was essentially built on the backs of families like Mr Guzmán's. Today, though, he readily admits he has never seen the sugar industry as broken and depressed as it is now - not even when the Soviet Union's lucrative sugar quotas dried up after the Cold War. Spiralling inflation, shortages of basic goods and the decades-long US economic embargo have made for a dire economic outlook across the board in Cuba. But things are particularly bleak in the sugar trade. ""There's not enough trucks and the fuel shortages mean sometimes several days pass before we can work,"" says Miguel, waiting in a tiny patch of shade for the Soviet-era lorries to arrive. The lost hours of harvest as men and machinery lie idle have acutely hurt production levels. Last season, Cuba's production fell to just 350,000 tonnes of raw sugar, an all-time low for the country, and well below the 1.3 million tonnes recorded in 2019. Miguel is one of the fastest cutters in his team - or pelotón - recognised by his bosses as among the most efficient in the country. Yet he says he receives no financial incentive for greater production beyond his love of the trade. ""My wages barely buy anything any more,"" he says with no hint of exaggeration over the worsening inflation in the country. ""But what can we do? Cuba needs the sugar."" It certainly does: Cuba now imports sugar to meet domestic demand - once unthinkable, and a far cry from the glory years when Cuban sugar was the envy of the Caribbean and exported around the world. Inside Ciudad Caracas, a 19th-Century sugar mill near Cienfuegos, the air is thick with the overpowering smell of molasses. As obsolete, rusting cogs grind tonnes of sugarcane into pulp and juice, the workers tell me it is one of just two dozen working sugar mills in Cuba. ""That's four more than originally planned for this season, thanks to the hard work and effort of the workers,"" says Dionis Pérez, communications director of the state-run sugar company, Azcuba. ""But the other 29 are at a standstill,"" he acknowledges. ""It's a disaster. Today the sugar industry in Cuba almost doesn't exist,"" says Juan Triana of the Centre for Studies of the Cuban Economy in Havana. The slump in sugar has serious implications for other parts of the Cuban economy, he argues, including on its export earnings from rum. ""We're producing the same quantity of sugar Cuba produced in the middle of the 19th Century."" The problems have undoubtedly been worsened by the ""maximum pressure"" policy brought in by former US President Donald Trump. His administration ratcheted up the trade embargo on the island, a measure later extended by President Joe Biden. But the issues facing Cuban sugar are not solely the fault of the US embargo. Years of chronic mismanagement and underinvestment have also wrecked the once-thriving industry. Today, sugar receives less than 3% of state investment as the Cuban government backs tourism as its main economic motor instead. One man who can still get his hands on enough sugar is Martin Nizarane. Part of a new breed of Cuban private entrepreneurs, his company Clamanta produces yoghurt and ice cream in a factory outside Havana. As Mr Nizarane shows me sacks of sugar imported in bulk from Colombia, he says he hopes to double production soon. The business has been hailed by Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel as a model for the future. That praise from the top, to many, amounts to a paradigm shift. It may still be considered a dirty word by the Cuban state but this is capitalism pure and simple, even if Martin Nizarane displays his revolutionary credentials by adorning his office with photographs of him hugging the late revolutionary leader, Fidel Castro. I put it to him that only people with close ties to the Cuban Communist Party can own a private business as sophisticated as his. He was quick to deny it. ""I am not an employee of the Cuban state. This is a non-state form of production which sells to both other non-state entities and state-owned companies,"" he retorts. ""The state treats me like just another private entrepreneur with no special privileges whatsoever."" Sugar's demise is just one part of Cuba's faltering economy. On 1 March, amid growing inflation, the government imposed a five-fold price increase on subsidised fuel at the petrol pumps. It was a difficult but overdue decision, officials said, arguing the government could no longer afford such high subsidies on fuel. As he queued to fill up his tank on the day the new prices came into force, Manuel Domínguez said he was not convinced. All he knows is that the measure is hurting drivers like him, and that Cubans are suffering now more than he can ever recall. ""There's no relationship between what we earn and the prices we see - whether that's fuel or food in the shops or anything else."" ""There needs to be a correlation between our wages and what things cost because, right now, for the average Cuban, fuel is simply unaffordable."" A few days later, economy and planning minister Alejandro Gil Fernández was arrested for alleged corruption. Some think he has been made a scapegoat for the state of the Cuban economy. Either way, it was an extraordinary - and very public - fall from grace. But most think it will take much more than one ministerial head to roll to pull Cuba from its economic woes. Back in the sugarcane fields of Cienfuegos, the cutters carry out their gruelling work with little optimism. Invariably, when talking about the sugar industry in Cuba, someone will quote the island's famous refrain: ""Without sugar, there's no country."" For Cuban economist Juan Triana that idea is being tested to its limit. A quintessential part of the national identity - part of the island's very DNA - is being eroded before Cubans' eyes. ""For more than maybe 150 years, the industry of the sugarcane was both the main export income and the locomotive for the rest of the economy. That's what we've lost."" ",BBC,18/05/2024,"['The men of the Yumuri sugar co-operative in Cuba have worked the cane fields around the city of Cienfuegos since they were old enough to wield a machete.', 'Cutting cane is all Miguel Guzmán has ever known.', 'He comes from a family of farm hands and started the tough, thankless work as a teenager.', 'For hundreds of years, sugar was the mainstay of the Cuban economy.', ""It was not just the island's main export but also the cornerstone of another national industry, rum."", ""Older Cubans remember when the island was essentially built on the backs of families like Mr Guzmán's."", ""Today, though, he readily admits he has never seen the sugar industry as broken and depressed as it is now - not even when the Soviet Union's lucrative sugar quotas dried up after the Cold War."", 'Spiralling inflation, shortages of basic goods and the decades-long US economic embargo have made for a dire economic outlook across the board in Cuba.', 'But things are particularly bleak in the sugar trade. ""', 'There\'s not enough trucks and the fuel shortages mean sometimes several days pass before we can work,"" says Miguel, waiting in a tiny patch of shade for the Soviet-era lorries to arrive.', 'The lost hours of harvest as men and machinery lie idle have acutely hurt production levels.', ""Last season, Cuba's production fell to just 350,000 tonnes of raw sugar, an all-time low for the country, and well below the 1.3 million tonnes recorded in 2019."", 'Miguel is one of the fastest cutters in his team - or pelotón - recognised by his bosses as among the most efficient in the country.', 'Yet he says he receives no financial incentive for greater production beyond his love of the trade. ""', 'My wages barely buy anything any more,"" he says with no hint of exaggeration over the worsening inflation in the country. ""', 'But what can we do?', 'Cuba needs the sugar.""', 'It certainly does: Cuba now imports sugar to meet domestic demand - once unthinkable, and a far cry from the glory years when Cuban sugar was the envy of the Caribbean and exported around the world.', 'Inside Ciudad Caracas, a 19th-Century sugar mill near Cienfuegos, the air is thick with the overpowering smell of molasses.', 'As obsolete, rusting cogs grind tonnes of sugarcane into pulp and juice, the workers tell me it is one of just two dozen working sugar mills in Cuba. ""', 'That\'s four more than originally planned for this season, thanks to the hard work and effort of the workers,"" says Dionis Pérez, communications director of the state-run sugar company, Azcuba. ""', 'But the other 29 are at a standstill,"" he acknowledges. ""', ""It's a disaster."", 'Today the sugar industry in Cuba almost doesn\'t exist,"" says Juan Triana of the Centre for Studies of the Cuban Economy in Havana.', 'The slump in sugar has serious implications for other parts of the Cuban economy, he argues, including on its export earnings from rum. ""', 'We\'re producing the same quantity of sugar Cuba produced in the middle of the 19th Century.""', 'The problems have undoubtedly been worsened by the ""maximum pressure"" policy brought in by former US President Donald Trump.', 'His administration ratcheted up the trade embargo on the island, a measure later extended by President Joe Biden.', 'But the issues facing Cuban sugar are not solely the fault of the US embargo.', 'Years of chronic mismanagement and underinvestment have also wrecked the once-thriving industry.', 'Today, sugar receives less than 3% of state investment as the Cuban government backs tourism as its main economic motor instead.', 'One man who can still get his hands on enough sugar is Martin Nizarane.', 'Part of a new breed of Cuban private entrepreneurs, his company Clamanta produces yoghurt and ice cream in a factory outside Havana.', 'As Mr Nizarane shows me sacks of sugar imported in bulk from Colombia, he says he hopes to double production soon.', 'The business has been hailed by Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel as a model for the future.', 'That praise from the top, to many, amounts to a paradigm shift.', 'It may still be considered a dirty word by the Cuban state but this is capitalism pure and simple, even if Martin Nizarane displays his revolutionary credentials by adorning his office with photographs of him hugging the late revolutionary leader, Fidel Castro.', 'I put it to him that only people with close ties to the Cuban Communist Party can own a private business as sophisticated as his.', 'He was quick to deny it. ""', 'I am not an employee of the Cuban state.', 'This is a non-state form of production which sells to both other non-state entities and state-owned companies,"" he retorts. ""', 'The state treats me like just another private entrepreneur with no special privileges whatsoever.""', ""Sugar's demise is just one part of Cuba's faltering economy."", 'On 1 March, amid growing inflation, the government imposed a five-fold price increase on subsidised fuel at the petrol pumps.', 'It was a difficult but overdue decision, officials said, arguing the government could no longer afford such high subsidies on fuel.', 'As he queued to fill up his tank on the day the new prices came into force, Manuel Domínguez said he was not convinced.', 'All he knows is that the measure is hurting drivers like him, and that Cubans are suffering now more than he can ever recall. ""', 'There\'s no relationship between what we earn and the prices we see - whether that\'s fuel or food in the shops or anything else."" ""', 'There needs to be a correlation between our wages and what things cost because, right now, for the average Cuban, fuel is simply unaffordable.""', 'A few days later, economy and planning minister Alejandro Gil Fernández was arrested for alleged corruption.', 'Some think he has been made a scapegoat for the state of the Cuban economy.', 'Either way, it was an extraordinary - and very public - fall from grace.', 'But most think it will take much more than one ministerial head to roll to pull Cuba from its economic woes.', 'Back in the sugarcane fields of Cienfuegos, the cutters carry out their gruelling work with little optimism.', 'Invariably, when talking about the sugar industry in Cuba, someone will quote the island\'s famous refrain: ""Without sugar, there\'s no country.""', 'For Cuban economist Juan Triana that idea is being tested to its limit.', 'A quintessential part of the national identity - part of the island\'s very DNA - is being eroded before Cubans\' eyes. ""', 'For more than maybe 150 years, the industry of the sugarcane was both the main export income and the locomotive for the rest of the economy.', 'That\'s what we\'ve lost.""']",-0.0434389662663717,"Yet he says he receives no financial incentive for greater production beyond his love of the trade. ""","Today, though, he readily admits he has never seen the sugar industry as broken and depressed as it is now - not even when the Soviet Union's lucrative sugar quotas dried up after the Cold War.",-0.3151909013589223,"That's four more than originally planned for this season, thanks to the hard work and effort of the workers,"" says Dionis Pérez, communications director of the state-run sugar company, Azcuba. ""","Spiralling inflation, shortages of basic goods and the decades-long US economic embargo have made for a dire economic outlook across the board in Cuba.",2024-05-21 Ryanair sees rises in air fares easing over summer,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cd11x3lqj20o,2024-05-20T06:50:37.177Z,"No-frills airline Ryanair has said fares during the peak summer season are set to be unchanged or only ""modestly"" higher than last year. The carrier said while it expected ""strong"" demand for flights in July and August, airfares had been growing slower than expected recently. Airline boss Michael O'Leary said this could be down to a ""recessionary feel around Europe"". His comments came as Ryanair said profits for the year to March jumped 34% to €1.92bn (£1.64bn) after fares rose by a fifth. Demand for air travel has been increasing steadily ever since the Covid pandemic restrictions were lifted. In the past few weeks, British Airways owner IAG and EasyJet have both been forecasting strong demand for flights this summer. Ryanair said it carried 183.7 million passengers in the year to March, with average fares up 21% to €49.80. It said it had seen record trading last summer, and strong traffic over Easter in March. However, this was offset by a fall in numbers at the end of last year, after Ryanair flights were removed from several online travel agents. The airline said bookings for this summer were ahead of last year, although fares were not as high as it had expected. ""We still see reasonable strength in July and August bookings, the peak summer months, but April, May and June are a little bit weaker than we had originally expected,"" Mr O'Leary said. ""We remain cautiously optimistic that peak summer 2024 fares will be flat to modestly ahead of summer 2023,"" he added “It’s a little bit surprising that pricing hasn’t been stronger and we’re not sure if that’s kind of consumer sentiment , or recessionary feel around Europe."" Ryanair, which has been hampered in its expansion plans by delays to the delivery of new Boeing planes, said it could carry 198-200 million customers this year if the new aircraft are delivered on schedule. It said there was a risk the deliveries could ""slip further"", but Mr O'Leary said he thought this was ""unlikely"". However, the airline said it would be short of about 23 Boeing 737s that were due to arrive by the end of July. Mr O'Leary said Ryanair would receive compensation from Boeing for the delays, although it would be ""modest"" and did not reflect the cost to the airline of having to cut back its growth plans. The carrier said it was continuing to work closely with the aerospace giant to improve quality and increase the pace of deliveries. Boeing's planes have come under intense focus once again after the company was plunged into a crisis in January when a panel on one of its aircraft blew out in mid-air. Scrutiny over Boeing's plane manufacturing processes has led to a slowdown in deliveries. Boeing boss Dave Calhoun has said he will step down from the planemaker at the end of the year. Mr O'Leary said Ryanair welcomed Boeing's management changes, and ""already we’re seeing improved quality on our aircraft deliveries but sadly not yet enough progress on accelerating those deliveries"". Ryanair did not give any profit forecasts for the current year, saying that was ""heavily dependent"" upon avoiding adverse events such as the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, extensive air traffic control disruptions or further Boeing delivery delays. ",BBC,20/05/2024,"['No-frills airline Ryanair has said fares during the peak summer season are set to be unchanged or only ""modestly"" higher than last year.', 'The carrier said while it expected ""strong"" demand for flights in July and August, airfares had been growing slower than expected recently.', 'Airline boss Michael O\'Leary said this could be down to a ""recessionary feel around Europe"".', 'His comments came as Ryanair said profits for the year to March jumped 34% to €1.92bn (£1.64bn) after fares rose by a fifth.', 'Demand for air travel has been increasing steadily ever since the Covid pandemic restrictions were lifted.', 'In the past few weeks, British Airways owner IAG and EasyJet have both been forecasting strong demand for flights this summer.', 'Ryanair said it carried 183.7 million passengers in the year to March, with average fares up 21% to €49.80.', 'It said it had seen record trading last summer, and strong traffic over Easter in March.', 'However, this was offset by a fall in numbers at the end of last year, after Ryanair flights were removed from several online travel agents.', 'The airline said bookings for this summer were ahead of last year, although fares were not as high as it had expected. ""', 'We still see reasonable strength in July and August bookings, the peak summer months, but April, May and June are a little bit weaker than we had originally expected,"" Mr O\'Leary said. ""', 'We remain cautiously optimistic that peak summer 2024 fares will be flat to modestly ahead of summer 2023,"" he added “It’s a little bit surprising that pricing hasn’t been stronger and we’re not sure if that’s kind of consumer sentiment , or recessionary feel around Europe.""', 'Ryanair, which has been hampered in its expansion plans by delays to the delivery of new Boeing planes, said it could carry 198-200 million customers this year if the new aircraft are delivered on schedule.', 'It said there was a risk the deliveries could ""slip further"", but Mr O\'Leary said he thought this was ""unlikely"".', 'However, the airline said it would be short of about 23 Boeing 737s that were due to arrive by the end of July.', 'Mr O\'Leary said Ryanair would receive compensation from Boeing for the delays, although it would be ""modest"" and did not reflect the cost to the airline of having to cut back its growth plans.', 'The carrier said it was continuing to work closely with the aerospace giant to improve quality and increase the pace of deliveries.', ""Boeing's planes have come under intense focus once again after the company was plunged into a crisis in January when a panel on one of its aircraft blew out in mid-air."", ""Scrutiny over Boeing's plane manufacturing processes has led to a slowdown in deliveries."", 'Boeing boss Dave Calhoun has said he will step down from the planemaker at the end of the year.', 'Mr O\'Leary said Ryanair welcomed Boeing\'s management changes, and ""already we’re seeing improved quality on our aircraft deliveries but sadly not yet enough progress on accelerating those deliveries"".', 'Ryanair did not give any profit forecasts for the current year, saying that was ""heavily dependent"" upon avoiding adverse events such as the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, extensive air traffic control disruptions or further Boeing delivery delays.']",0.022353811237513,"We remain cautiously optimistic that peak summer 2024 fares will be flat to modestly ahead of summer 2023,"" he added “It’s a little bit surprising that pricing hasn’t been stronger and we’re not sure if that’s kind of consumer sentiment , or recessionary feel around Europe.""","Ryanair did not give any profit forecasts for the current year, saying that was ""heavily dependent"" upon avoiding adverse events such as the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, extensive air traffic control disruptions or further Boeing delivery delays.",0.1990700244903564,"Ryanair said it carried 183.7 million passengers in the year to March, with average fares up 21% to €49.80.",Scrutiny over Boeing's plane manufacturing processes has led to a slowdown in deliveries.,2024-05-21 AI 'godfather' says universal basic income will be needed,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cnd607ekl99o,2024-05-18T13:18:15.919Z,"The computer scientist regarded as the “godfather of artificial intelligence” says the government will have to establish a universal basic income to deal with the impact of AI on inequality. Professor Geoffrey Hinton told BBC Newsnight that a benefits reform giving fixed amounts of cash to every citizen would be needed because he was “very worried about AI taking lots of mundane jobs”. “I was consulted by people in Downing Street and I advised them that universal basic income was a good idea,” he said. He said while he felt AI would increase productivity and wealth, the money would go to the rich “and not the people whose jobs get lost and that’s going to be very bad for society”. Professor Hinton is the pioneer of neural networks, which form the theoretical basis of the current explosion in artificial intelligence. Until last year he worked at Google, but left the tech giant so he could talk more freely about the dangers from unregulated AI. The concept of a universal basic income amounts to the government paying all individuals a set salary regardless of their means. Critics say it would be extremely costly and divert funding away from public services, while not necessarily helping to alleviate poverty. A government spokesman said there were ""no plans to introduce a universal basic income"". Professor Hinton reiterated his concern that there were human extinction-level threats emerging. Developments over the last year showed governments were unwilling to rein in military use of AI, he said, while the competition to develop products rapidly meant there was a risk tech companies wouldn't “put enough effort into safety”. Professor Hinton said ""my guess is in between five and 20 years from now there’s a probability of half that we’ll have to confront the problem of AI trying to take over"". This would lead to an “extinction-level threat” for humans because we could have “created a form of intelligence that is just better than biological intelligence… That's very worrying for us”. AI could “evolve”, he said, “to get the motivation to make more of itself” and could autonomously “develop a sub-goal of getting control”. He said there was already evidence of large language models - a type of AI algorithm used to generate text - choosing to be deceptive. He said recent applications of AI to generate thousands of military targets were the “thin end of the wedge”. “What I’m most concerned about is when these can autonomously make the decision to kill people,"" he said. Professor Hinton said something similar to the Geneva Conventions - the international treaties that establish legal standards for humanitarian treatment in war - may be needed to regulate the military use of AI. ""But I don't think that's going to happen until after very nasty things have happened,” he added. Asked if the West was in a Manhattan Project-style race - referring to nuclear weapons research during World War Two - with autocracies such as Russia and China on the military use of AI, Professor Hinton replied: “[Russian President Vladimir] Putin said some years ago that whoever controls AI controls the world. So I imagine they're working very hard. ""Fortunately, the West is probably well ahead of them in research. We're probably still slightly ahead of China. But China's putting more resources in. And so in terms of military uses I think there's going to be a race”. He said a better solution would be a prohibition on military uses of AI. ",BBC,18/05/2024,"['The computer scientist regarded as the “godfather of artificial intelligence” says the government will have to establish a universal basic income to deal with the impact of AI on inequality.', 'Professor Geoffrey Hinton told BBC Newsnight that a benefits reform giving fixed amounts of cash to every citizen would be needed because he was “very worried about AI taking lots of mundane jobs”. “', 'I was consulted by people in Downing Street and I advised them that universal basic income was a good idea,” he said.', 'He said while he felt AI would increase productivity and wealth, the money would go to the rich “and not the people whose jobs get lost and that’s going to be very bad for society”.', 'Professor Hinton is the pioneer of neural networks, which form the theoretical basis of the current explosion in artificial intelligence.', 'Until last year he worked at Google, but left the tech giant so he could talk more freely about the dangers from unregulated AI.', 'The concept of a universal basic income amounts to the government paying all individuals a set salary regardless of their means.', 'Critics say it would be extremely costly and divert funding away from public services, while not necessarily helping to alleviate poverty.', 'A government spokesman said there were ""no plans to introduce a universal basic income"".', 'Professor Hinton reiterated his concern that there were human extinction-level threats emerging.', ""Developments over the last year showed governments were unwilling to rein in military use of AI, he said, while the competition to develop products rapidly meant there was a risk tech companies wouldn't “put enough effort into safety”."", 'Professor Hinton said ""my guess is in between five and 20 years from now there’s a probability of half that we’ll have to confront the problem of AI trying to take over"".', ""This would lead to an “extinction-level threat” for humans because we could have “created a form of intelligence that is just better than biological intelligence… That's very worrying for us”."", 'AI could “evolve”, he said, “to get the motivation to make more of itself” and could autonomously “develop a sub-goal of getting control”.', 'He said there was already evidence of large language models - a type of AI algorithm used to generate text - choosing to be deceptive.', 'He said recent applications of AI to generate thousands of military targets were the “thin end of the wedge”. “', 'What I’m most concerned about is when these can autonomously make the decision to kill people,"" he said.', 'Professor Hinton said something similar to the Geneva Conventions - the international treaties that establish legal standards for humanitarian treatment in war - may be needed to regulate the military use of AI. ""', ""But I don't think that's going to happen until after very nasty things have happened,” he added."", 'Asked if the West was in a Manhattan Project-style race - referring to nuclear weapons research during World War Two - with autocracies such as Russia and China on the military use of AI, Professor Hinton replied: “[Russian President Vladimir] Putin said some years ago that whoever controls AI controls the world.', 'So I imagine they\'re working very hard. ""', 'Fortunately, the West is probably well ahead of them in research.', ""We're probably still slightly ahead of China."", ""But China's putting more resources in."", ""And so in terms of military uses I think there's going to be a race”."", 'He said a better solution would be a prohibition on military uses of AI.']",-0.027017192741244,He said a better solution would be a prohibition on military uses of AI.,"Critics say it would be extremely costly and divert funding away from public services, while not necessarily helping to alleviate poverty.",0.1888855174183845,"He said while he felt AI would increase productivity and wealth, the money would go to the rich “and not the people whose jobs get lost and that’s going to be very bad for society”.","Developments over the last year showed governments were unwilling to rein in military use of AI, he said, while the competition to develop products rapidly meant there was a risk tech companies wouldn't “put enough effort into safety”.",2024-05-21 "Rates should be cut to 3.5% by end of 2025, IMF says",https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cldd6x6gglxo,2024-05-21T10:16:27.932Z,"UK interest rates should be cut to 3.5% by the end of next year, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has recommended. Such a move could see the Bank of England cut its key rate by up to seven times from its current level of 5.25%. The IMF's comments came as it upgraded its UK's growth forecast for 2024, but it it advised against any further tax cuts. Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said the report ""clearly shows that independent international economists agree that the UK economy has turned a corner"". Mr Hunt added that the IMF had ""forecast we will grow faster than any other large European country over the next six years - so it is time to shake off some of the unjustified pessimism about our prospects"". Labour’s shadow chief secretary Darren Jones said the Conservatives had left the country in ""economic chaos"". ""Millions of people are paying more on their mortgages, prices are still rising in the shops and the UK economy has been rocked by a mini-budget that left working families worse off,"" he said. Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesperson Sarah Olney said the government had ""blown a black hole in the country's finances, bringing public services to their knees"". The IMF is an international organisation with 190 member countries, including the UK. They work together to try to stabilise the global economy. One of the Fund's jobs is to advise its members on how to improve their economies. The IMF said the UK's economy was ""approaching a soft landing” after last year's mild recession. It upgraded its growth forecast marginally for this year from 0.5% to 0.7%, and predicted growth of 1.5% in 2025. While UK inflation, the rate at which prices increase, is expected to fall close to the Bank of England's target of 2% on Wednesday, it is then set to rise a little over the course of the rest of the year, before “durably” settling at the target rate in early 2025, the Fund said. When it came to interest rate cuts, the IMF noted the Bank had to balance the risk of not cutting too quickly before inflation is under control, against that of keeping rates too high, which could hit growth. But speaking at a news conference, Ali Abbas, the IMF UK mission chief, said the Fund recommended cutting the current Bank rate of 5.25% to either 4.75% or 4.5% by the end of the year. It also recommended further cuts in 2025, taking the rate as low as 3.5%. “Our recommendation is for 50-75 basis points [0.5-0.75% points] this year, plus we project and this is also this is our recommendation of 100 basis points [1% point] cuts in 2025,"" Mr Abbas said. The IMF warned the next government faced “difficult choices” on taxes and spending, and said it would not have recommended the recent cuts to National Insurance ""given their significant cost"". The Fund assumes that the government will have to spend significantly more on public services over the next five years, meaning that its self-imposed target for falling debt as a share of national income will not be met. This leads to a gap of about 1% of UK gross domestic product (GDP), or £30bn a year. Given the state of the public finances, the IMF said it would ""advise against additional tax cuts"". In January, the Fund had also advised against tax cuts but the government announced another cut to National Insurance in the March Budget. IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva told a news conference that the UK needed to bolster its public finances, which were hit by heavy spending during the Covid pandemic. ""We are genuinely concerned, not just for the UK, [but] for all countries that have used fiscal buffers extensively, that they must do more to rebuild these buffers,"" she said. ""In a world of more uncertainty, we do not know when there may be again a call on governments to have to borrow more to spend more."" The report’s key long-term concern was a lack of workers arising from long-term illness and fewer foreign workers. It suggested that if there was a new global financial crisis, “a shock to UK sovereign risk premia cannot be ruled out” which would push up interest rates. The IMF suggests extra tax revenue from road usage, VAT, inheritance and property should be required. It also advises the end of the triple lock on the state pension - a government promise to raise it by the rate of earnings, inflation or 2.5%, whichever is highest - and instead pegging increases to inflation alone. The IMF also pointedly advised the government to “stay the course on climate policy”, after recent delays to net zero policy timetables, for example, on electric cars. The annual report is the conclusion of a team of IMF economists who have spent months meeting policymakers and businesses as part of what is known as the Article IV process. But economic forecasters are not always right with their predictions and the IMF and UK government have disagreed in the past over previous projections. ",BBC,21/05/2024,"['UK interest rates should be cut to 3.5% by the end of next year, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has recommended.', 'Such a move could see the Bank of England cut its key rate by up to seven times from its current level of 5.25%.', ""The IMF's comments came as it upgraded its UK's growth forecast for 2024, but it it advised against any further tax cuts."", 'Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said the report ""clearly shows that independent international economists agree that the UK economy has turned a corner"".', 'Mr Hunt added that the IMF had ""forecast we will grow faster than any other large European country over the next six years - so it is time to shake off some of the unjustified pessimism about our prospects"".', 'Labour’s shadow chief secretary Darren Jones said the Conservatives had left the country in ""economic chaos"". ""', 'Millions of people are paying more on their mortgages, prices are still rising in the shops and the UK economy has been rocked by a mini-budget that left working families worse off,"" he said.', 'Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesperson Sarah Olney said the government had ""blown a black hole in the country\'s finances, bringing public services to their knees"".', 'The IMF is an international organisation with 190 member countries, including the UK.', 'They work together to try to stabilise the global economy.', ""One of the Fund's jobs is to advise its members on how to improve their economies."", 'The IMF said the UK\'s economy was ""approaching a soft landing” after last year\'s mild recession.', 'It upgraded its growth forecast marginally for this year from 0.5% to 0.7%, and predicted growth of 1.5% in 2025.', ""While UK inflation, the rate at which prices increase, is expected to fall close to the Bank of England's target of 2% on Wednesday, it is then set to rise a little over the course of the rest of the year, before “durably” settling at the target rate in early 2025, the Fund said."", 'When it came to interest rate cuts, the IMF noted the Bank had to balance the risk of not cutting too quickly before inflation is under control, against that of keeping rates too high, which could hit growth.', 'But speaking at a news conference, Ali Abbas, the IMF UK mission chief, said the Fund recommended cutting the current Bank rate of 5.25% to either 4.75% or 4.5% by the end of the year.', 'It also recommended further cuts in 2025, taking the rate as low as 3.5%. “', 'Our recommendation is for 50-75 basis points [0.5-0.75% points] this year, plus we project and this is also this is our recommendation of 100 basis points [1% point] cuts in 2025,"" Mr Abbas said.', 'The IMF warned the next government faced “difficult choices” on taxes and spending, and said it would not have recommended the recent cuts to National Insurance ""given their significant cost"".', 'The Fund assumes that the government will have to spend significantly more on public services over the next five years, meaning that its self-imposed target for falling debt as a share of national income will not be met.', 'This leads to a gap of about 1% of UK gross domestic product (GDP), or £30bn a year.', 'Given the state of the public finances, the IMF said it would ""advise against additional tax cuts"".', 'In January, the Fund had also advised against tax cuts but the government announced another cut to National Insurance in the March Budget.', 'IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva told a news conference that the UK needed to bolster its public finances, which were hit by heavy spending during the Covid pandemic. ""', 'We are genuinely concerned, not just for the UK, [but] for all countries that have used fiscal buffers extensively, that they must do more to rebuild these buffers,"" she said. ""', 'In a world of more uncertainty, we do not know when there may be again a call on governments to have to borrow more to spend more.""', 'The report’s key long-term concern was a lack of workers arising from long-term illness and fewer foreign workers.', 'It suggested that if there was a new global financial crisis, “a shock to UK sovereign risk premia cannot be ruled out” which would push up interest rates.', 'The IMF suggests extra tax revenue from road usage, VAT, inheritance and property should be required.', 'It also advises the end of the triple lock on the state pension - a government promise to raise it by the rate of earnings, inflation or 2.5%, whichever is highest - and instead pegging increases to inflation alone.', 'The IMF also pointedly advised the government to “stay the course on climate policy”, after recent delays to net zero policy timetables, for example, on electric cars.', 'The annual report is the conclusion of a team of IMF economists who have spent months meeting policymakers and businesses as part of what is known as the Article IV process.', 'But economic forecasters are not always right with their predictions and the IMF and UK government have disagreed in the past over previous projections.']",-0.123904855719287,"Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said the report ""clearly shows that independent international economists agree that the UK economy has turned a corner"".","It suggested that if there was a new global financial crisis, “a shock to UK sovereign risk premia cannot be ruled out” which would push up interest rates.",0.0678097248077392,"It upgraded its growth forecast marginally for this year from 0.5% to 0.7%, and predicted growth of 1.5% in 2025.","Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesperson Sarah Olney said the government had ""blown a black hole in the country's finances, bringing public services to their knees"".",2024-05-21 "Food price rises returning to normal, Kantar survey says",https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0xxwz00nz9o,2024-05-21T07:02:53.205Z,"Food price rises are returning to ""more normal"" rates, research suggests, although shoppers are still seeking out cheaper own-brand goods. Grocery price inflation - the rate at which prices increase - has fallen to 2.4%, according to research firm Kantar, the lowest since October 2021. The findings come ahead of official figures due on Wednesday which are expected to show a sharp drop in overall inflation. The easing of price rises has raised expectations that the Bank of England will cut interest rates this summer. Kantar said that despite the easing of food price rises, shoppers were still following money-saving habits. ""Typically, an inflation rate of around 3% is when we start to see marked changes in consumers’ behaviour, with shoppers trading down to cheaper items when the rate goes above this line and vice versa when the rate drops,"" said Fraser McKevitt, head of retail and consumer insight at Kantar. ""However, after nearly two and a half years of rapidly rising prices, it could take a bit longer for shoppers to unwind the habits they have learnt to help them manage the cost of living crisis. ""Own-label lines are proving resilient, for example, and they are still growing faster than brands, making up over half (52%) of total spending."" Sales of premium own-label ranges remained popular, up by 9.9% from a year earlier. Kantar also said it expected summer sports events such as the Euro 2024 men’s football tournament and the Olympic Games to boost sales, especially alcoholic drinks. ""During England’s quarter final match against France in the 2022 FIFA Men’s World Cup, take-home beer sales hit their biggest daily takings of the year outside of Christmas,"" Mr McKevitt said. Overall inflation peaked at 11.1% in late 2022, but increases in prices for food and non-alcoholic drinks were running at a rate of almost 20% last year - the highest since the 1970s. In response, the Bank of England increased interest rates in a bid to slow price rises. The theory is that if you make borrowing more expensive, people have less money to spend, or may choose to save more as saving rates go up. This in turn reduces demand for goods and helps cool inflation. The Bank's key rate now stands at 5.25% - a 16-year high - but as inflation has fallen there has been intense speculation over when the rate will be cut. The most recent inflation data showed that prices rose by 3.2% in the year to March, although the figure released on Wednesday is expected to see the rate drop close to the Bank's target of 2%. On Monday, Bank deputy governor Ben Broadbent said that a rate cut at ""some time"" over the summer was ""possible"". ",BBC,21/05/2024,"['Food price rises are returning to ""more normal"" rates, research suggests, although shoppers are still seeking out cheaper own-brand goods.', 'Grocery price inflation - the rate at which prices increase - has fallen to 2.4%, according to research firm Kantar, the lowest since October 2021.', 'The findings come ahead of official figures due on Wednesday which are expected to show a sharp drop in overall inflation.', 'The easing of price rises has raised expectations that the Bank of England will cut interest rates this summer.', 'Kantar said that despite the easing of food price rises, shoppers were still following money-saving habits. ""', 'Typically, an inflation rate of around 3% is when we start to see marked changes in consumers’ behaviour, with shoppers trading down to cheaper items when the rate goes above this line and vice versa when the rate drops,"" said Fraser McKevitt, head of retail and consumer insight at Kantar. ""', 'However, after nearly two and a half years of rapidly rising prices, it could take a bit longer for shoppers to unwind the habits they have learnt to help them manage the cost of living crisis. ""', 'Own-label lines are proving resilient, for example, and they are still growing faster than brands, making up over half (52%) of total spending.""', 'Sales of premium own-label ranges remained popular, up by 9.9% from a year earlier.', 'Kantar also said it expected summer sports events such as the Euro 2024 men’s football tournament and the Olympic Games to boost sales, especially alcoholic drinks. ""', 'During England’s quarter final match against France in the 2022 FIFA Men’s World Cup, take-home beer sales hit their biggest daily takings of the year outside of Christmas,"" Mr McKevitt said.', 'Overall inflation peaked at 11.1% in late 2022, but increases in prices for food and non-alcoholic drinks were running at a rate of almost 20% last year - the highest since the 1970s.', 'In response, the Bank of England increased interest rates in a bid to slow price rises.', 'The theory is that if you make borrowing more expensive, people have less money to spend, or may choose to save more as saving rates go up.', 'This in turn reduces demand for goods and helps cool inflation.', ""The Bank's key rate now stands at 5.25% - a 16-year high - but as inflation has fallen there has been intense speculation over when the rate will be cut."", ""The most recent inflation data showed that prices rose by 3.2% in the year to March, although the figure released on Wednesday is expected to see the rate drop close to the Bank's target of 2%."", 'On Monday, Bank deputy governor Ben Broadbent said that a rate cut at ""some time"" over the summer was ""possible"".']",0.0362971434939468,"In response, the Bank of England increased interest rates in a bid to slow price rises.",The Bank's key rate now stands at 5.25% - a 16-year high - but as inflation has fallen there has been intense speculation over when the rate will be cut.,0.4910678677260875,"Sales of premium own-label ranges remained popular, up by 9.9% from a year earlier.","Grocery price inflation - the rate at which prices increase - has fallen to 2.4%, according to research firm Kantar, the lowest since October 2021.",2024-05-21 Children top up pocket money with extra work,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c1004pnd44eo,2024-05-21T00:59:57.722Z,"Children are getting paid for chores at home and developing side hustles to top up pocket money, a report has claimed. Financially stretched parents are less likely to give youngsters a weekly allowance than they were the previous year, according to NatWest Rooster Money. But children are supplementing their incomes, thanks to completing other work at home and for themselves. That takes overall weekly income up by 3p on a year earlier to £9.23, the report estimates. The findings are based on data drawn from more than 300,000 children aged between 6 and 17 who use the NatWest Rooster Money pocket money app and prepaid card. As such, it can only be an estimate, and will not include children who do not receive any money at all. It suggests that a shrinking proportion of families, with children using the app, now pay pocket money as part of a regular routine. In this data, about 30% pay regular pocket money, compared with 32% a year earlier, with youngsters most commonly receiving it on a Saturday. A greater proportion than that are paid for chores - about 40% - although this was also down from 47% a year earlier. Mowing the lawn, cleaning the car, cleaning the windows and gardening are the most lucrative, according to the report. Others are developing their own income, primarily through paper rounds and reselling their possessions, it found. The BBC spoke to a group of youngsters attending a youth club who said they were developing an entrepreneurial spirit. ""I don't really get pocket money but I have my own little business [applying glitter tattoos],"" said Scarlett, aged 10. ""So far, out of all of the parties I've done this year, I've probably got like 100 and something pounds."" Nine-year-old Holly said: ""Every week I get £1.50 and I do tasks. I make my bed, I do the dishwasher, I do the dusting, I clean my bedroom, I put my clothes away. ""My favourite thing to spend it on is probably sweets."" And Joe, 12, said: ""I don't get pocket money but I am good at home so if I get an accomplishment I will get £10."" Children were most likely to want to save up in order to spend on gaming and holidays, the report suggested. But Joe has something else in mind. ""Probably saving up for a car. I know I'm 12 but every pocket money counts."" ",BBC,21/05/2024,"['Children are getting paid for chores at home and developing side hustles to top up pocket money, a report has claimed.', 'Financially stretched parents are less likely to give youngsters a weekly allowance than they were the previous year, according to NatWest Rooster Money.', 'But children are supplementing their incomes, thanks to completing other work at home and for themselves.', 'That takes overall weekly income up by 3p on a year earlier to £9.23, the report estimates.', 'The findings are based on data drawn from more than 300,000 children aged between 6 and 17 who use the NatWest Rooster Money pocket money app and prepaid card.', 'As such, it can only be an estimate, and will not include children who do not receive any money at all.', 'It suggests that a shrinking proportion of families, with children using the app, now pay pocket money as part of a regular routine.', 'In this data, about 30% pay regular pocket money, compared with 32% a year earlier, with youngsters most commonly receiving it on a Saturday.', 'A greater proportion than that are paid for chores - about 40% - although this was also down from 47% a year earlier.', 'Mowing the lawn, cleaning the car, cleaning the windows and gardening are the most lucrative, according to the report.', 'Others are developing their own income, primarily through paper rounds and reselling their possessions, it found.', 'The BBC spoke to a group of youngsters attending a youth club who said they were developing an entrepreneurial spirit. ""', 'I don\'t really get pocket money but I have my own little business [applying glitter tattoos],"" said Scarlett, aged 10. ""', 'So far, out of all of the parties I\'ve done this year, I\'ve probably got like 100 and something pounds.""', 'Nine-year-old Holly said: ""Every week I get £1.50 and I do tasks.', 'I make my bed, I do the dishwasher, I do the dusting, I clean my bedroom, I put my clothes away. ""', 'My favourite thing to spend it on is probably sweets.""', 'And Joe, 12, said: ""I don\'t get pocket money but I am good at home so if I get an accomplishment I will get £10.""', 'Children were most likely to want to save up in order to spend on gaming and holidays, the report suggested.', 'But Joe has something else in mind. ""', 'Probably saving up for a car.', 'I know I\'m 12 but every pocket money counts.""']",0.1819051599651064,"Children were most likely to want to save up in order to spend on gaming and holidays, the report suggested.",,-0.197792100906372,"That takes overall weekly income up by 3p on a year earlier to £9.23, the report estimates.",A greater proportion than that are paid for chores - about 40% - although this was also down from 47% a year earlier.,2024-05-21 Who is Paula Vennells? Ex-Post Office boss in Horizon IT inquiry,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cjq5g95e8vpo,2024-05-16T12:42:46.588Z,"Ex-Post Office boss Paula Vennells is set to give evidence this week as part of the inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal. Ms Vennells was chief executive of the Post Office from 2012 to 2019, which included the last few years of the scandal. Between 1999 and 2015, more than 900 sub-postmasters were wrongly prosecuted after faulty software said money was missing from Post Office branch accounts. Despite living a relatively private life, Ms Vennells, 65, is now one of the most recognisable faces of the scandal. Earlier this year, she was portrayed by actress Lia Williams in the ITV drama Mr Bates Vs The Post Office. Since the programme aired, she has only been spotted once in public, refusing to answer questions from a Channel 4 reporter on whether there had been a cover-up at the Post Office, as she cycled away from a church cemetery. The ITV drama also highlighted her position as an ordained priest - a role she pursued before she joined the Post Office - having trained as a Church of England deacon between 2002 and 2005 before eventually becoming ordained in 2006. Ms Vennells served at several churches in Bedfordshire and was interviewed for the position of the Bishop of London in 2017. She relinquished her clerical duties in 2021 but remains an ordained priest. Ms Vennells grew up in the north west of England and went to the University of Bradford to study French, Russian and Economics, where she met her future husband John. After graduating in 1981, she took the first step in her business career with a job at Unilever. She went on to work in management positions at big brands such as Argos, Dixons, L'Oréal, Morrisons, Dunelm and Whitbread. After leaving the Post Office in 2019, she acted as a non-executive board member at the Cabinet Office for a year, and also became chairman of Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust but resigned in December 2020 citing personal reasons. But it is her role at the Post Office that is under scrutiny. Ms Vennells joined the Post Office in 2007 as a group network director, and was promoted to chief executive in 2012, the same year that the Post Office split from Royal Mail. During her time at the Post Office there were periods of financial struggle, which forced thousands of post offices across the country to close. Many that remained were modernised and the Post Office went from losing millions a year to making a profit. Ms Vennells was photographed visiting several of the modernised branches and meeting those who ran them. In pictures, she is nearly always seen wearing her staple pearl earrings. During her time leading the Post Office, Ms Vennells earned a total of £5.1m, peaking in 2018 when she took home £718,300 in salary, bonuses, pensions and other benefits. Ms Vennells faced increasing criticism and scrutiny of how she dealt with the investigation into the Horizon software while she worked at the Post Office. She is widely quoted as calling the Horizon computer system ""robust"". The last time she spoke publicly about the scandal was nearly a decade ago, in 2015, when she was questioned by a committee of MPs. Former chancellor Nadhim Zahawi was on the Commons business committee at the time, and notably played himself for free when the scene was recreated in the ITV drama. He asked Ms Vennells why emails from 2009 were not given to private investigators and whether they would be. Ms Vennells said: ""We have shared whatever information is appropriate."" However, private investigator Ian Henderson denied that this was the case. Ms Vennells stepped down from the Post Office in 2019. At the start of that year she appeared on the New Years Honours List and was awarded a CBE for services to the Post Office and to charity. But by December 2019, the High Court had concluded that the faulty Horizon software was to blame for shortfalls in branch accounts. And as the ITV drama brought more national outrage over the Horizon scandal, this year legislation was introduced to overturn all sub-postmasters' convictions. Ms Vennells handed back her CBE in January this year, saying she was listening to ""calls from sub-postmasters and others"" to return the honour. Those same sub-postmasters and others will eagerly await her testimony before the inquiry, where she is scheduled to appear for three days starting on Wednesday 22 May. ",BBC,16/05/2024,"['Ex-Post Office boss Paula Vennells is set to give evidence this week as part of the inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal.', 'Ms Vennells was chief executive of the Post Office from 2012 to 2019, which included the last few years of the scandal.', 'Between 1999 and 2015, more than 900 sub-postmasters were wrongly prosecuted after faulty software said money was missing from Post Office branch accounts.', 'Despite living a relatively private life, Ms Vennells, 65, is now one of the most recognisable faces of the scandal.', 'Earlier this year, she was portrayed by actress Lia Williams in the ITV drama Mr Bates Vs The Post Office.', 'Since the programme aired, she has only been spotted once in public, refusing to answer questions from a Channel 4 reporter on whether there had been a cover-up at the Post Office, as she cycled away from a church cemetery.', 'The ITV drama also highlighted her position as an ordained priest - a role she pursued before she joined the Post Office - having trained as a Church of England deacon between 2002 and 2005 before eventually becoming ordained in 2006.', 'Ms Vennells served at several churches in Bedfordshire and was interviewed for the position of the Bishop of London in 2017.', 'She relinquished her clerical duties in 2021 but remains an ordained priest.', 'Ms Vennells grew up in the north west of England and went to the University of Bradford to study French, Russian and Economics, where she met her future husband John.', 'After graduating in 1981, she took the first step in her business career with a job at Unilever.', ""She went on to work in management positions at big brands such as Argos, Dixons, L'Oréal, Morrisons, Dunelm and Whitbread."", 'After leaving the Post Office in 2019, she acted as a non-executive board member at the Cabinet Office for a year, and also became chairman of Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust but resigned in December 2020 citing personal reasons.', 'But it is her role at the Post Office that is under scrutiny.', 'Ms Vennells joined the Post Office in 2007 as a group network director, and was promoted to chief executive in 2012, the same year that the Post Office split from Royal Mail.', 'During her time at the Post Office there were periods of financial struggle, which forced thousands of post offices across the country to close.', 'Many that remained were modernised and the Post Office went from losing millions a year to making a profit.', 'Ms Vennells was photographed visiting several of the modernised branches and meeting those who ran them.', 'In pictures, she is nearly always seen wearing her staple pearl earrings.', 'During her time leading the Post Office, Ms Vennells earned a total of £5.1m, peaking in 2018 when she took home £718,300 in salary, bonuses, pensions and other benefits.', 'Ms Vennells faced increasing criticism and scrutiny of how she dealt with the investigation into the Horizon software while she worked at the Post Office.', 'She is widely quoted as calling the Horizon computer system ""robust"".', 'The last time she spoke publicly about the scandal was nearly a decade ago, in 2015, when she was questioned by a committee of MPs.', 'Former chancellor Nadhim Zahawi was on the Commons business committee at the time, and notably played himself for free when the scene was recreated in the ITV drama.', 'He asked Ms Vennells why emails from 2009 were not given to private investigators and whether they would be.', 'Ms Vennells said: ""We have shared whatever information is appropriate.""', 'However, private investigator Ian Henderson denied that this was the case.', 'Ms Vennells stepped down from the Post Office in 2019.', 'At the start of that year she appeared on the New Years Honours List and was awarded a CBE for services to the Post Office and to charity.', 'But by December 2019, the High Court had concluded that the faulty Horizon software was to blame for shortfalls in branch accounts.', ""And as the ITV drama brought more national outrage over the Horizon scandal, this year legislation was introduced to overturn all sub-postmasters' convictions."", 'Ms Vennells handed back her CBE in January this year, saying she was listening to ""calls from sub-postmasters and others"" to return the honour.', 'Those same sub-postmasters and others will eagerly await her testimony before the inquiry, where she is scheduled to appear for three days starting on Wednesday 22 May.']",-0.0483923325126942,At the start of that year she appeared on the New Years Honours List and was awarded a CBE for services to the Post Office and to charity.,"And as the ITV drama brought more national outrage over the Horizon scandal, this year legislation was introduced to overturn all sub-postmasters' convictions.",-0.1830947756767273,"During her time leading the Post Office, Ms Vennells earned a total of £5.1m, peaking in 2018 when she took home £718,300 in salary, bonuses, pensions and other benefits.","But by December 2019, the High Court had concluded that the faulty Horizon software was to blame for shortfalls in branch accounts.",2024-05-21 35-year mortgages: 'I had no choice but to get one',https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cn3dded32j2o,2024-05-19T00:47:54.856Z,"Young homebuyers are facing huge challenges when it comes to getting on - and staying on - the housing ladder. Nicola Webb, a 34-year-old nurse, felt she had little choice but to opt for an ultra-long mortgage when purchasing her first home last year. It's set to end when she is 68, but she says stretching out the repayments is ""the only way I can just about afford my mortgage as a single homeowner"". “I've not known lower mortgage rates so I just accept what it is.” Despite the fact that she managed to save a chunky deposit for her £147,000 two-bedroom flat in Gloucestershire, Nicola's five-year fixed rate mortgage costs £598 a month - about a third of her monthly wages after tax and student loan deductions. Once her student loan is paid off - or eventually written off - she hopes to reduce the length of her mortgage term from 35 years, or look at using any extra disposable income to overpay it. She says she's grateful she has been able to get on the housing ladder at all. While mortgage costs take up a large part of her income, she thinks it is still cheaper than renting in her local area. ""I was having no luck at all with renting... and for me it's all about trying to keep it as cheap as possible."" Recent figures suggest that Nicola's situation is becoming more and more common. Data from the Bank of England shows that hundreds of thousands of homeowners have taken out mortgages in the last three years that they will still be paying off into retirement. While longer mortgage terms might make repayments more affordable in the here and now, homeowners will be paying off more overall in interest. Some industry figures have also expressed concern that buyers may not be able to afford a mortgage once they retire and will raid their pension savings to clear their home loan, leaving them with less to live on in old age. But for some, a longer term of 35 or 40 years is seen as a temporary solution as they wait to see if mortgage rates will fall back from relative highs. Martin Tapper, a mortgage broker based in Essex, told the BBC that most of the first-time buyers he has advised this year have opted for 40-year terms. ""A young family can escape exorbitant rent costs in order to purchase a home where the mortgage cost is far cheaper on a longer term,"" he suggests. He adds he would only guide a client to these longer terms if they were the ""right kind"", saying he always recommends switching back to a shorter term later on if possible, for example if a client's wage has gone up or if they're moving home. And, he says, it is vital to get insurance to protect against payments becoming tricky if someone's health deteriorates or they lose their job. For 30-year-old Shane Lees, weighing up the pros and cons of an ultra-long mortgage has been a serious undertaking. He and his partner are remortgaging so that they can buy a three-bedroom house in West Sussex where they can start a family. After speaking to six or seven mortgage brokers, they have decided to choose a mortgage term of 35 years, dropping down to 25 years at the end of a two-year fixed deal. Shane says that he and his partner are now less likely to go for something at the top end of their budget due to the prospect of higher monthly repayments. They have opted for a lender Shane describes as ""realistic"", which would be willing to renegotiate at the end of the two-year fixed deal, while most were offering a rate of about 5.5%. The pressure faced by younger homeowners like Shane is pretty clear, with the sharp rise in the proportion of mortgages that run beyond state pension age. The number of homeowners aged under 30 taking out such mortgages more than doubled over the two-year period, while for those aged under 40 the number was up 30%. But Sarah Coles, head of personal finance at Hargreaves Lansdown, says people shouldn't bank on interest rates being lower when they come to reduce the term later. ""Economists are constantly changing their expectations for when the Bank of England will cut rates. ""Back in January some of them were predicting cuts as early as March, and now we’re expecting them this summer instead. Even then, cuts aren’t expected particularly rapidly, so anyone holding their breath for much lower rates will have quite a wait on their hands."" She suggests that those on a 35 or 40-year mortgage need not only a plan in place to pay it off, but also a plan B for life's ""unexpected twists and turns"". For example, if you're carrying your mortgage into retirement and expect to sell up and downsize to clear the debt, you need to think about what to do if you change your mind and want to stay in your home, she says. ""It can be exactly what people need to make their mortgage more affordable, but they need to appreciate the wider implications."" For homeowners like Shane, he appreciates there may be risks attached but feels he's in a lucky position to have this problem in the first place. Additional reporting by Bernadette McCague. Read more here ",BBC,19/05/2024,"['Young homebuyers are facing huge challenges when it comes to getting on - and staying on - the housing ladder.', 'Nicola Webb, a 34-year-old nurse, felt she had little choice but to opt for an ultra-long mortgage when purchasing her first home last year.', 'It\'s set to end when she is 68, but she says stretching out the repayments is ""the only way I can just about afford my mortgage as a single homeowner"". “', ""I've not known lower mortgage rates so I just accept what it is.”"", ""Despite the fact that she managed to save a chunky deposit for her £147,000 two-bedroom flat in Gloucestershire, Nicola's five-year fixed rate mortgage costs £598 a month - about a third of her monthly wages after tax and student loan deductions."", 'Once her student loan is paid off - or eventually written off - she hopes to reduce the length of her mortgage term from 35 years, or look at using any extra disposable income to overpay it.', ""She says she's grateful she has been able to get on the housing ladder at all."", 'While mortgage costs take up a large part of her income, she thinks it is still cheaper than renting in her local area. ""', 'I was having no luck at all with renting... and for me it\'s all about trying to keep it as cheap as possible.""', ""Recent figures suggest that Nicola's situation is becoming more and more common."", 'Data from the Bank of England shows that hundreds of thousands of homeowners have taken out mortgages in the last three years that they will still be paying off into retirement.', 'While longer mortgage terms might make repayments more affordable in the here and now, homeowners will be paying off more overall in interest.', 'Some industry figures have also expressed concern that buyers may not be able to afford a mortgage once they retire and will raid their pension savings to clear their home loan, leaving them with less to live on in old age.', 'But for some, a longer term of 35 or 40 years is seen as a temporary solution as they wait to see if mortgage rates will fall back from relative highs.', 'Martin Tapper, a mortgage broker based in Essex, told the BBC that most of the first-time buyers he has advised this year have opted for 40-year terms. ""', 'A young family can escape exorbitant rent costs in order to purchase a home where the mortgage cost is far cheaper on a longer term,"" he suggests.', 'He adds he would only guide a client to these longer terms if they were the ""right kind"", saying he always recommends switching back to a shorter term later on if possible, for example if a client\'s wage has gone up or if they\'re moving home.', ""And, he says, it is vital to get insurance to protect against payments becoming tricky if someone's health deteriorates or they lose their job."", 'For 30-year-old Shane Lees, weighing up the pros and cons of an ultra-long mortgage has been a serious undertaking.', 'He and his partner are remortgaging so that they can buy a three-bedroom house in West Sussex where they can start a family.', 'After speaking to six or seven mortgage brokers, they have decided to choose a mortgage term of 35 years, dropping down to 25 years at the end of a two-year fixed deal.', 'Shane says that he and his partner are now less likely to go for something at the top end of their budget due to the prospect of higher monthly repayments.', 'They have opted for a lender Shane describes as ""realistic"", which would be willing to renegotiate at the end of the two-year fixed deal, while most were offering a rate of about 5.5%.', 'The pressure faced by younger homeowners like Shane is pretty clear, with the sharp rise in the proportion of mortgages that run beyond state pension age.', 'The number of homeowners aged under 30 taking out such mortgages more than doubled over the two-year period, while for those aged under 40 the number was up 30%.', 'But Sarah Coles, head of personal finance at Hargreaves Lansdown, says people shouldn\'t bank on interest rates being lower when they come to reduce the term later. ""', 'Economists are constantly changing their expectations for when the Bank of England will cut rates. ""', 'Back in January some of them were predicting cuts as early as March, and now we’re expecting them this summer instead.', 'Even then, cuts aren’t expected particularly rapidly, so anyone holding their breath for much lower rates will have quite a wait on their hands.""', 'She suggests that those on a 35 or 40-year mortgage need not only a plan in place to pay it off, but also a plan B for life\'s ""unexpected twists and turns"".', 'For example, if you\'re carrying your mortgage into retirement and expect to sell up and downsize to clear the debt, you need to think about what to do if you change your mind and want to stay in your home, she says. ""', 'It can be exactly what people need to make their mortgage more affordable, but they need to appreciate the wider implications.""', ""For homeowners like Shane, he appreciates there may be risks attached but feels he's in a lucky position to have this problem in the first place."", 'Additional reporting by Bernadette McCague.', 'Read more here']",0.1786289152445031,"The pressure faced by younger homeowners like Shane is pretty clear, with the sharp rise in the proportion of mortgages that run beyond state pension age.","Even then, cuts aren’t expected particularly rapidly, so anyone holding their breath for much lower rates will have quite a wait on their hands.""",0.403078269213438,"The number of homeowners aged under 30 taking out such mortgages more than doubled over the two-year period, while for those aged under 40 the number was up 30%.","Some industry figures have also expressed concern that buyers may not be able to afford a mortgage once they retire and will raid their pension savings to clear their home loan, leaving them with less to live on in old age.",2024-05-21 Industry bosses cast doubt on jobs 'bootcamp' plans,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4nnlj2889eo,2024-05-21T03:23:31.819Z,"Industry bosses have cast doubt on new plans for skills ""bootcamps"" for unemployed Britons as part of government efforts to plug gaps in the jobs market left by overseas workers. The government already runs intensive training ""bootcamps"" to help people out of work retrain in many sectors, but new, initial plans will focus on industries hit hardest by labour shortages from new migration rules. Work and pensions secretary Mel Stride said the UK had relied on foreign labour ""for too long"". But industry figures suggested the plans may not be enough for businesses that are at ""breaking point"". Under the latest plans, benefits claimants would be given training for roles in key sectors facing shortages including hospitality, care, construction and manufacturing. The new model will be partly based on the measures introduced in 2021 to target a chronic shortage of HGV drivers, which included skills ""bootcamps"" and Jobcentre training schemes. Mr Stride said: ""It's a plan providing more opportunities for people here at home to get on, to progress, and to increase their pay. ""I know this presents a recruitment challenge for some employers in certain sectors, particularly those that have relied more on migration in the past. ""For too long we have relied on labour from abroad when there is great talent right here in the UK - I am determined to put that right."" Mr Stride will also chair a new cross-government taskforce to develop recruitment initiatives for industries with major shortages. Kate Nicholls, chief executive of UK Hospitality, said the trade body was pleased to be working with the government to fill ""crucial gaps"" in the workforce. However, the Recruitment and Employment Confederation questioned the prioritisation of British workers over foreign workers when employers are struggling to fill many job postings. ""The bottom line is that many British businesses are at breaking point because of labour shortages,"" said Kate Shoesmith, its deputy chief executive. ""It shouldn't be about picking winners or employing British workers over foreigners. It is about creating the right conditions for long-term, sustainable economic growth"". Engineering and manufacturing organisation Make UK said many employers were not aware of existing ""bootcamps"" and that any new measures needed to be promoted properly. Meanwhile, TUC general secretary Paul Nowak suggested the announcement did not include enough detail on its implementation, describing it as ""performative politics"". Labour also dismissed the proposals as a ""talking shop"" that would not deal with the scale of the problem. The plans, overseen by a new ministerial taskforce headed by Mr Stride, come ahead of official net migration statistics set to be published on Thursday. Net migration in the UK - the difference between the number of people coming and those leaving - hit a record high of 745,000 in 2022. Since then, the government has announced a set of measures aimed at significantly cutting the number of people entering Britain. These include drastically hiking the salary threshold for skilled workers to £38,700 and reforms to make it harder for Britons earning under the national average to bring over foreign spouses. Mr Stride acknowledged the new rules, which aim to reduce the number of people arriving in Britain by 300,000, present a ""recruitment challenge"" for employers. He insisted the government was building a new economic model ""based on British talent"". Shadow work and pensions secretary Alison McGovern accused the government of ""running down our skills and training system"". She said: ""We now have record levels of net migration. They should be putting in place proper plans to tackle worker shortages and adopting Labour's plans to connect the immigration system to skills."" Liberal Democrat work and pensions spokeswoman, Wendy Chamberlain, said: ""In many ways this is an admission that the Conservatives have no plan to tackle the biggest reason that people are unable to work, which is that NHS waiting lists are through the roof. ""Thousands are struggling to access the healthcare they need, meaning people are unable to go back to work. ""We will only get the economy back fighting fit by fixing the health crisis,"" she added. ",BBC,21/05/2024,"['Industry bosses have cast doubt on new plans for skills ""bootcamps"" for unemployed Britons as part of government efforts to plug gaps in the jobs market left by overseas workers.', 'The government already runs intensive training ""bootcamps"" to help people out of work retrain in many sectors, but new, initial plans will focus on industries hit hardest by labour shortages from new migration rules.', 'Work and pensions secretary Mel Stride said the UK had relied on foreign labour ""for too long"".', 'But industry figures suggested the plans may not be enough for businesses that are at ""breaking point"".', 'Under the latest plans, benefits claimants would be given training for roles in key sectors facing shortages including hospitality, care, construction and manufacturing.', 'The new model will be partly based on the measures introduced in 2021 to target a chronic shortage of HGV drivers, which included skills ""bootcamps"" and Jobcentre training schemes.', 'Mr Stride said: ""It\'s a plan providing more opportunities for people here at home to get on, to progress, and to increase their pay. ""', 'I know this presents a recruitment challenge for some employers in certain sectors, particularly those that have relied more on migration in the past. ""', 'For too long we have relied on labour from abroad when there is great talent right here in the UK - I am determined to put that right.""', 'Mr Stride will also chair a new cross-government taskforce to develop recruitment initiatives for industries with major shortages.', 'Kate Nicholls, chief executive of UK Hospitality, said the trade body was pleased to be working with the government to fill ""crucial gaps"" in the workforce.', 'However, the Recruitment and Employment Confederation questioned the prioritisation of British workers over foreign workers when employers are struggling to fill many job postings. ""', 'The bottom line is that many British businesses are at breaking point because of labour shortages,"" said Kate Shoesmith, its deputy chief executive. ""', ""It shouldn't be about picking winners or employing British workers over foreigners."", 'It is about creating the right conditions for long-term, sustainable economic growth"".', 'Engineering and manufacturing organisation Make UK said many employers were not aware of existing ""bootcamps"" and that any new measures needed to be promoted properly.', 'Meanwhile, TUC general secretary Paul Nowak suggested the announcement did not include enough detail on its implementation, describing it as ""performative politics"".', 'Labour also dismissed the proposals as a ""talking shop"" that would not deal with the scale of the problem.', 'The plans, overseen by a new ministerial taskforce headed by Mr Stride, come ahead of official net migration statistics set to be published on Thursday.', 'Net migration in the UK - the difference between the number of people coming and those leaving - hit a record high of 745,000 in 2022.', 'Since then, the government has announced a set of measures aimed at significantly cutting the number of people entering Britain.', 'These include drastically hiking the salary threshold for skilled workers to £38,700 and reforms to make it harder for Britons earning under the national average to bring over foreign spouses.', 'Mr Stride acknowledged the new rules, which aim to reduce the number of people arriving in Britain by 300,000, present a ""recruitment challenge"" for employers.', 'He insisted the government was building a new economic model ""based on British talent"".', 'Shadow work and pensions secretary Alison McGovern accused the government of ""running down our skills and training system"".', 'She said: ""We now have record levels of net migration.', 'They should be putting in place proper plans to tackle worker shortages and adopting Labour\'s plans to connect the immigration system to skills.""', 'Liberal Democrat work and pensions spokeswoman, Wendy Chamberlain, said: ""In many ways this is an admission that the Conservatives have no plan to tackle the biggest reason that people are unable to work, which is that NHS waiting lists are through the roof. ""', 'Thousands are struggling to access the healthcare they need, meaning people are unable to go back to work. ""', 'We will only get the economy back fighting fit by fixing the health crisis,"" she added.']",0.047629687805524,"For too long we have relied on labour from abroad when there is great talent right here in the UK - I am determined to put that right.""","We will only get the economy back fighting fit by fixing the health crisis,"" she added.",-0.2301803044974804,"Mr Stride said: ""It's a plan providing more opportunities for people here at home to get on, to progress, and to increase their pay. ""","Shadow work and pensions secretary Alison McGovern accused the government of ""running down our skills and training system"".",2024-05-21 "Water industry investors have withdrawn billions, claims research",https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cw4478wnjdpo,2024-05-19T23:00:42.271Z,"Shareholders in some of the UK's largest water companies have taken out tens of billions of pounds but failed to invest, new research claims, with firms planning to raise household bills to fund future spending. Investors have withdrawn £85.2bn from 10 water and sewage firms in England and Wales since the industry was privatised more than 30 years ago, analysis by the University of Greenwich suggests. Companies are under pressure following sewage spills and water leaks, which critics have blamed on under-investment in the country's infrastructure. Ofwat, the industry regulator, said it ""strongly refuted"" the figures. ""While we agree wholeheartedly with demands for companies to change, the facts are there has been huge investment in the sector of over £200bn,"" a spokesperson said. Water UK, which represents the industry, said investment in the sector was ""double the annual levels seen before privatisation"". Water and sewage firms want to increase customers' bills by an average 33% over the next five years to fund improvements in the services for households. But David Hall, visiting professor at the Public Services International Research Unit at the University of Greenwich, claims that water companies have invested ""less than nothing of their own money"" and are “treating their customers like a cash cow”. The University of Greenwich examined the company accounts of the top 10 water and sewage companies in England and Wales including Thames Water, United Utilities and Severn Trent. It said that between privatisation in 1989 and 2023, money invested by shareholders in the largest firms shrunk by £5.5bn when adjusted for inflation. Over the same period, the amount of ""retained earnings"" - profits left over once things like dividends have been paid out, that can be used to invest in a business - had dropped by £6.7bn in real terms. Meanwhile, the total amount that these firms paid out to their shareholders in dividends grew to £72.8bn, when taking inflation into account. Ofwat said the dividend figure was ""simply wrong"". ""[It] does not represent the true total given it is inflation-adjusted. Ofwat offers the figure since privatisation as £52bn,"" the regulator said. Taken together, the fall in shareholders' investment and retained earnings - or profit - and rising dividend payments mean that, according to the University of Greenwich, owners have withdrawn £85.2bn. Water and sewage firms want to spend around £100bn over the next five years. They argue that they need more money to improve their infrastructure to help limit leaks. But Prof Hall said: ""You put the prices up because you can and you get more money out of the customers, and then you pass it on to the shareholders because the business you’re in is providing a good return to your shareholders. ""That’s why the companies do what they do and we shouldn’t expect anything different.” A spokesperson for Water UK said: ""Investment requires financing through dividends. ""Water companies now want to increase the pace of investment, with a record plan over the next five years, to ensure the security of our water supply in the future and significantly reduce the amount of sewage entering rivers and seas. ""We now need Ofwat to give us the green light to get on with it.” There were 464,056 sewage spills in 2023, according to the Environment Agency, a 54% increase on the previous year. Sewage is defined as anything that goes down a household drain. That includes from the toilet, personal washing or domestic cleaning such as from a washing machine or doing the dishes. It also includes run-off from roads. A warmer winter and wet weather has meant that many roadside grills have been overwhelmed. The next few weeks are key in determining by how much water companies can raise customers' bills. Ofwat will meet in the coming days to scrutinise water firms’ spending plans and proposed price rises which would affect bills between 2025 and 2030. Ofwat’s draft proposals are set to be published on 12 June. Water companies can appeal if they do not agree with Ofwat’s recommendations. But Prof Hall said there needed to be a fundamental change in the way that the water industry is run. ""This is a service that matters to us,"" he said. ""What we need to do is reverse this system and move to the way the rest of the world does it which is through public authorities and take it back in the public sector.” A spokesperson for Ofwat said: ""We share the concerns of the general public and campaigners about the performance of water companies which, is simply not good enough. ""We have been holding companies to account and have imposed penalties of over £300m in recent years. We want to see a transformation in companies' performance and will be setting out our plans to deliver this in mid-June."" By Simon Jack, Business editor Given the huge sums borrowed, invested and paid out from water companies since privatisation it is debatable whether the contribution of a billion here or a billion there from private shareholders' own pockets (equity) over that time would have made much difference to the financial problems at some of the water companies. According to Dieter Helm, professor of economic policy at Oxford University, the problem is not the payment of dividends per se, or their reluctance to make additional cash injections. It is the level of debt taken on by some companies without the regulator intervening. Some owners took advantage of the steady inflation-linked revenue from water bills to service large debts, which in some cases were used to pay dividends. In five out of the 10 years that Australian firm Macquarie was Thames Water’s biggest shareholder, dividends exceeded the amount of profit the company was making – and debt quadrupled from £2.5bn to more than £10bn. “Ofwat should never have allowed them to mortgage the balance sheet,” says Prof Helm. Thames shareholders recently withdrew an offer to inject a further £3bn cash into the company when it became clear that Ofwat would not allow them to raise customer bills by the 40% on top of inflation that they were requesting. According to Prof Helm, the regulator has allowed the company's balance sheet to become “exhausted” and while new equity is now needed, Ofwat is “trying to shut the stable door when the horse has bolted”. Arguments on the wisdom of privatising monopolies run deep and long. The pollution in our rivers and beaches is ample evidence of its failure for many, while others point to the fact that some £200bn has been invested in the water network and that is more than would have happened if invisible pipes underground had had to compete with more visible hospitals and schools competing for government money. In that time water bills have actually fallen in real terms, i.e. have risen less than inflation over three decades. That is about to see a sharp reversal as companies ask the regulator to approve bill increases of anywhere between 17% (Anglian Water) to 72% (Southern Water). Companies will not get everything they want but the BBC understands that they will get more than half of the bill increases they are hoping for. ",BBC,19/05/2024,"[""Shareholders in some of the UK's largest water companies have taken out tens of billions of pounds but failed to invest, new research claims, with firms planning to raise household bills to fund future spending."", 'Investors have withdrawn £85.2bn from 10 water and sewage firms in England and Wales since the industry was privatised more than 30 years ago, analysis by the University of Greenwich suggests.', ""Companies are under pressure following sewage spills and water leaks, which critics have blamed on under-investment in the country's infrastructure."", 'Ofwat, the industry regulator, said it ""strongly refuted"" the figures. ""', 'While we agree wholeheartedly with demands for companies to change, the facts are there has been huge investment in the sector of over £200bn,"" a spokesperson said.', 'Water UK, which represents the industry, said investment in the sector was ""double the annual levels seen before privatisation"".', ""Water and sewage firms want to increase customers' bills by an average 33% over the next five years to fund improvements in the services for households."", 'But David Hall, visiting professor at the Public Services International Research Unit at the University of Greenwich, claims that water companies have invested ""less than nothing of their own money"" and are “treating their customers like a cash cow”.', 'The University of Greenwich examined the company accounts of the top 10 water and sewage companies in England and Wales including Thames Water, United Utilities and Severn Trent.', 'It said that between privatisation in 1989 and 2023, money invested by shareholders in the largest firms shrunk by £5.5bn when adjusted for inflation.', 'Over the same period, the amount of ""retained earnings"" - profits left over once things like dividends have been paid out, that can be used to invest in a business - had dropped by £6.7bn in real terms.', 'Meanwhile, the total amount that these firms paid out to their shareholders in dividends grew to £72.8bn, when taking inflation into account.', 'Ofwat said the dividend figure was ""simply wrong"". ""[', 'It] does not represent the true total given it is inflation-adjusted.', 'Ofwat offers the figure since privatisation as £52bn,"" the regulator said.', ""Taken together, the fall in shareholders' investment and retained earnings - or profit - and rising dividend payments mean that, according to the University of Greenwich, owners have withdrawn £85.2bn."", 'Water and sewage firms want to spend around £100bn over the next five years.', 'They argue that they need more money to improve their infrastructure to help limit leaks.', 'But Prof Hall said: ""You put the prices up because you can and you get more money out of the customers, and then you pass it on to the shareholders because the business you’re in is providing a good return to your shareholders. ""', 'That’s why the companies do what they do and we shouldn’t expect anything different.”', 'A spokesperson for Water UK said: ""Investment requires financing through dividends. ""', 'Water companies now want to increase the pace of investment, with a record plan over the next five years, to ensure the security of our water supply in the future and significantly reduce the amount of sewage entering rivers and seas. ""', 'We now need Ofwat to give us the green light to get on with it.”', 'There were 464,056 sewage spills in 2023, according to the Environment Agency, a 54% increase on the previous year.', 'Sewage is defined as anything that goes down a household drain.', 'That includes from the toilet, personal washing or domestic cleaning such as from a washing machine or doing the dishes.', 'It also includes run-off from roads.', 'A warmer winter and wet weather has meant that many roadside grills have been overwhelmed.', ""The next few weeks are key in determining by how much water companies can raise customers' bills."", 'Ofwat will meet in the coming days to scrutinise water firms’ spending plans and proposed price rises which would affect bills between 2025 and 2030.', 'Ofwat’s draft proposals are set to be published on 12 June.', 'Water companies can appeal if they do not agree with Ofwat’s recommendations.', 'But Prof Hall said there needed to be a fundamental change in the way that the water industry is run. ""', 'This is a service that matters to us,"" he said. ""', 'What we need to do is reverse this system and move to the way the rest of the world does it which is through public authorities and take it back in the public sector.”', 'A spokesperson for Ofwat said: ""We share the concerns of the general public and campaigners about the performance of water companies which, is simply not good enough. ""', 'We have been holding companies to account and have imposed penalties of over £300m in recent years.', 'We want to see a transformation in companies\' performance and will be setting out our plans to deliver this in mid-June.""', ""By Simon Jack, Business editor Given the huge sums borrowed, invested and paid out from water companies since privatisation it is debatable whether the contribution of a billion here or a billion there from private shareholders' own pockets (equity) over that time would have made much difference to the financial problems at some of the water companies."", 'According to Dieter Helm, professor of economic policy at Oxford University, the problem is not the payment of dividends per se, or their reluctance to make additional cash injections.', 'It is the level of debt taken on by some companies without the regulator intervening.', 'Some owners took advantage of the steady inflation-linked revenue from water bills to service large debts, which in some cases were used to pay dividends.', 'In five out of the 10 years that Australian firm Macquarie was Thames Water’s biggest shareholder, dividends exceeded the amount of profit the company was making – and debt quadrupled from £2.5bn to more than £10bn. “', 'Ofwat should never have allowed them to mortgage the balance sheet,” says Prof Helm.', 'Thames shareholders recently withdrew an offer to inject a further £3bn cash into the company when it became clear that Ofwat would not allow them to raise customer bills by the 40% on top of inflation that they were requesting.', ""According to Prof Helm, the regulator has allowed the company's balance sheet to become “exhausted” and while new equity is now needed, Ofwat is “trying to shut the stable door when the horse has bolted”."", 'Arguments on the wisdom of privatising monopolies run deep and long.', 'The pollution in our rivers and beaches is ample evidence of its failure for many, while others point to the fact that some £200bn has been invested in the water network and that is more than would have happened if invisible pipes underground had had to compete with more visible hospitals and schools competing for government money.', 'In that time water bills have actually fallen in real terms, i.e. have risen less than inflation over three decades.', 'That is about to see a sharp reversal as companies ask the regulator to approve bill increases of anywhere between 17% (Anglian Water) to 72% (Southern Water).', 'Companies will not get everything they want but the BBC understands that they will get more than half of the bill increases they are hoping for.']",0.0617000298202696,"Water companies now want to increase the pace of investment, with a record plan over the next five years, to ensure the security of our water supply in the future and significantly reduce the amount of sewage entering rivers and seas. ""","Companies are under pressure following sewage spills and water leaks, which critics have blamed on under-investment in the country's infrastructure.",0.1285975552522219,"Meanwhile, the total amount that these firms paid out to their shareholders in dividends grew to £72.8bn, when taking inflation into account.","Taken together, the fall in shareholders' investment and retained earnings - or profit - and rising dividend payments mean that, according to the University of Greenwich, owners have withdrawn £85.2bn.",2024-05-21 FDA approves Amgen's treatment for most deadly form of lung cancer,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/fda-approves-amgen-small-cell-lung-cancer-treatment.html,2024-05-16T21:47:17+0000,"In this articleThe Food and Drug Administration on Thursday approved Amgen's therapy for patients with the most deadly form of lung cancer. The agency cleared the drug, which will be marketed under the name Imdelltra, as a second or later line of treatment for people with advanced small-cell lung cancer. That means patients can take the drug if their cancer progresses while on or after trying one other form of treatment, which is typically a type of chemotherapy. Amgen's drug is also known by its generic name tarlatamab.In clinical trials, Amgen's drug has been shown to reduce tumor growth and help people with small-cell lung cancer live significantly longer.Of the more than 2.2 million patients who are diagnosed with lung cancer worldwide each year, small-cell lung cancer comprises 15%, or 330,000, of those cases, Amgen said. Around 80% to 85% of people with small-cell lung cancer are diagnosed with an advanced stage of the disease, according to a study published in the Journal of Cancer.There are around 35,000 patients with small-cell lung cancer in the U.S., Dr. Jay Bradner, Amgen's chief scientific officer, told CNBC. Small-cell lung cancer usually starts in the airways of the lung and grows rapidly, creating large tumors and spreading throughout the body. Symptoms include bloody phlegm, cough, chest pain and shortness of breath.Only 3% of patients with small-cell lung cancer that has spread to other parts of the body live past 5 years, according to the American Cancer Society. That five-year survival rate accounts for 7% among all patients with the condition, regardless of whether the cancer spreads. Bradner said patients with small-cell lung cancer typically have four to five months to live.Lynne Bell, a small-cell lung cancer patient from Atlanta, Georgia, is an exception. She says she was ""horrified"" and ""in a dark place"" after she was diagnosed with an advanced stage of the condition in 2021.But she started taking Amgen's Imdelltra in an ongoing clinical trial in September after other treatments, including chemotherapy, stopped working. Since then, Bell said her tumors have shrunk significantly and cancer scans ""look great."" She said she specifically noticed her pain go away after taking a second dose of Amgen's drug.When asked how long she would continue Imdelltra, Bell said, ""If this medication is working and I'm not having any side effects, I'm good to go. I'm in it to win it.""Maida Mangiameli, a small-cell lung cancer advocate and patient mentor from Naperville, Illinois, is also a survivor of the devastating disease. She was diagnosed with an advanced stage of the condition in 2018 but was deemed in remission this year, meaning the treatment she received has reduced the signs and symptoms of the cancer. Mangiameli has been in remission for five years. Her treatments included chemotherapy and 28 days of radiation therapy. She told CNBC that Amgen's Imdelltra may ""not be something for me, but it might be down the road."" Mangiameli added that she's excited to know that there will be another therapy option for other patients suffering from small-cell lung cancer. She said the development of new treatments for the disease has been ""on the back burner"" for several years. Amgen's Bradner also said treatment options ""are pretty meager."" ""It's just one of the most dreadful cancers and so we needed a new solution,"" he said. Amgen's drug is called a bispecific T-cell engager, which is designed to redirect the immune system's T-cells to recognize and kill cancer cells. The approval is based on results from a phase two trial that followed more than 200 patients with small-cell lung cancer. Cancer tumors shrank in 40% of people who were given a 10-milligram dose of Imdelltra every 2 weeks.Notably, the median time that people lived after starting 10-milligram doses of Amgen's drug was 14.3 months. That compares with around six to 12 months with current treatments, according to the National Cancer Institute. ""These patients who would normally only have four to five months enjoy almost another full year of life,"" Bradner told CNBC. That time can make a huge difference for patients. For Mangiameli, receiving treatment for small-cell lung cancer gave her years to get closer to her grandchild, who was born not long before she was diagnosed with the disease. ""I had the impetus, the drive to make sure I survived. … I just had my first grandchild, I have to live long enough for us to become pals,"" Mangiameli said. Meanwhile, Bell said taking Imdelltra gave her the time to travel; she went on a trip with her daughter to San Diego.""I'm trying to go as many places that I can get to,"" Bell told CNBC.Amgen is continuing to study Imdelltra in several trials, including some that will test the drug as an earlier line of treatment for small-cell lung cancer. That includes a late-stage trial comparing Imdelltra with chemotherapy as a second-line treatment for the disease. Amgen also plans to start another phase three study on the drug as a first-line treatment for patients at an advanced stage of small-cell lung cancer. ""What makes us hopeful is, as you develop cancer medicines, that if they work in later stages of the disease, they can work even better when you move them"" to first-line treatment, Bradner said.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"[""In this articleThe Food and Drug Administration on Thursday approved Amgen's therapy for patients with the most deadly form of lung cancer."", 'The agency cleared the drug, which will be marketed under the name Imdelltra, as a second or later line of treatment for people with advanced small-cell lung cancer.', 'That means patients can take the drug if their cancer progresses while on or after trying one other form of treatment, which is typically a type of chemotherapy.', ""Amgen's drug is also known by its generic name tarlatamab."", ""In clinical trials, Amgen's drug has been shown to reduce tumor growth and help people with small-cell lung cancer live significantly longer."", 'Of the more than 2.2 million patients who are diagnosed with lung cancer worldwide each year, small-cell lung cancer comprises 15%, or 330,000, of those cases, Amgen said.', 'Around 80% to 85% of people with small-cell lung cancer are diagnosed with an advanced stage of the disease, according to a study published in the Journal of Cancer.', ""There are around 35,000 patients with small-cell lung cancer in the U.S., Dr. Jay Bradner, Amgen's chief scientific officer, told CNBC.Small-cell lung cancer usually starts in the airways of the lung and grows rapidly, creating large tumors and spreading throughout the body."", 'Symptoms include bloody phlegm, cough, chest pain and shortness of breath.', 'Only 3% of patients with small-cell lung cancer that has spread to other parts of the body live past 5 years, according to the American Cancer Society.', 'That five-year survival rate accounts for 7% among all patients with the condition, regardless of whether the cancer spreads.', 'Bradner said patients with small-cell lung cancer typically have four to five months to live.', 'Lynne Bell, a small-cell lung cancer patient from Atlanta, Georgia, is an exception.', 'She says she was ""horrified"" and ""in a dark place"" after she was diagnosed with an advanced stage of the condition in 2021.But she started taking Amgen\'s Imdelltra in an ongoing clinical trial in September after other treatments, including chemotherapy, stopped working.', 'Since then, Bell said her tumors have shrunk significantly and cancer scans ""look great.""', ""She said she specifically noticed her pain go away after taking a second dose of Amgen's drug."", 'When asked how long she would continue Imdelltra, Bell said, ""If this medication is working and I\'m not having any side effects, I\'m good to go.', ""I'm in it to win it."", '""Maida Mangiameli, a small-cell lung cancer advocate and patient mentor from Naperville, Illinois, is also a survivor of the devastating disease.', 'She was diagnosed with an advanced stage of the condition in 2018 but was deemed in remission this year, meaning the treatment she received has reduced the signs and symptoms of the cancer.', 'Mangiameli has been in remission for five years.', 'Her treatments included chemotherapy and 28 days of radiation therapy.', 'She told CNBC that Amgen\'s Imdelltra may ""not be something for me, but it might be down the road.', '""Mangiameli added that she\'s excited to know that there will be another therapy option for other patients suffering from small-cell lung cancer.', 'She said the development of new treatments for the disease has been ""on the back burner"" for several years.', 'Amgen\'s Bradner also said treatment options ""are pretty meager.', '""""It\'s just one of the most dreadful cancers and so we needed a new solution,"" he said.', ""Amgen's drug is called a bispecific T-cell engager, which is designed to redirect the immune system's T-cells to recognize and kill cancer cells."", 'The approval is based on results from a phase two trial that followed more than 200 patients with small-cell lung cancer.', 'Cancer tumors shrank in 40% of people who were given a 10-milligram dose of Imdelltra every 2 weeks.', ""Notably, the median time that people lived after starting 10-milligram doses of Amgen's drug was 14.3 months."", 'That compares with around six to 12 months with current treatments, according to the National Cancer Institute.', '""These patients who would normally only have four to five months enjoy almost another full year of life,"" Bradner told CNBC.That time can make a huge difference for patients.', 'For Mangiameli, receiving treatment for small-cell lung cancer gave her years to get closer to her grandchild, who was born not long before she was diagnosed with the disease.', '""I had the impetus, the drive to make sure I survived. …', 'I just had my first grandchild, I have to live long enough for us to become pals,"" Mangiameli said.', 'Meanwhile, Bell said taking Imdelltra gave her the time to travel; she went on a trip with her daughter to San Diego.', '""I\'m trying to go as many places that I can get to,"" Bell told CNBC.Amgen is continuing to study Imdelltra in several trials, including some that will test the drug as an earlier line of treatment for small-cell lung cancer.', 'That includes a late-stage trial comparing Imdelltra with chemotherapy as a second-line treatment for the disease.', 'Amgen also plans to start another phase three study on the drug as a first-line treatment for patients at an advanced stage of small-cell lung cancer.', '""What makes us hopeful is, as you develop cancer medicines, that if they work in later stages of the disease, they can work even better when you move them"" to first-line treatment, Bradner said.']",-0.3129286844652374,"""I had the impetus, the drive to make sure I survived. …","Of the more than 2.2 million patients who are diagnosed with lung cancer worldwide each year, small-cell lung cancer comprises 15%, or 330,000, of those cases, Amgen said.",0.3947548912121699,"""What makes us hopeful is, as you develop cancer medicines, that if they work in later stages of the disease, they can work even better when you move them"" to first-line treatment, Bradner said.","Amgen's Bradner also said treatment options ""are pretty meager.",2024-05-20 Have you decided to retire abroad?,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/15/economy/have-you-decided-to-retire-abroad-callout/index.html," Published 3:21 PM EDT, Wed May 15, 2024 ","Retirement is expensive, and more Americans see spending their later years abroad as a good option to stretch their savings and improve their quality of life. The number of Social Security recipients living outside the US increased from 307,000 in 2008 to more than 450,000 in 2022. Some countries have even eased their visa requirements to attract older US expats. Have you decided to retire abroad or have you already made the move? We want to hear from you. Share your story below.",CNN,15/05/2024,"['Retirement is expensive, and more Americans see spending their later years abroad as a good option to stretch their savings and improve their quality of life.', 'The number of Social Security recipients living outside the US increased from 307,000 in 2008 to more than 450,000 in 2022.', 'Some countries have even eased their visa requirements to attract older US expats.', 'Have you decided to retire abroad or have you already made the move?', 'We want to hear from you.', 'Share your story below.']",0.3718837653133073,"Retirement is expensive, and more Americans see spending their later years abroad as a good option to stretch their savings and improve their quality of life.",,0.9993227322896322,"The number of Social Security recipients living outside the US increased from 307,000 in 2008 to more than 450,000 in 2022.",,2024-05-20 Canada Goose jumps 16% after the company reports growth surge in China,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/canada-goose-goos-q4-earnings-report-2024.html,2024-05-16T20:34:21+0000,"In this articleShares of Canada Goose surged 16% on Thursday after the company reported earnings for the fiscal fourth quarter and announced it was expecting year-over-year sales growth for fiscal year 2025.Here's how the company did:Revenue increased 22% from the same period a year ago.Neil Bowden, Canada Goose's chief financial officer, said on an earnings call with analysts that store comparisons were ""relatively flat,"" but year-over-year sales growth for the period was led by locations in Greater China — the region comprising Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan — which saw a 29.7% increase. The broader Asia-Pacific region excluding Greater China was up 29.1%, and North American sales saw an increase of 24.5%.Net income for the fiscal fourth quarter ended March 31 swung to CA$7.6 million, or 5 Canadian cents per share, from a loss of CA$10 million, or 3 Canadian cents per share, in the year-earlier period.Bowden said the growth was supported by domestic shopping on the Chinese mainland, as well as mainland tourists driving ""strong growth"" in Hong Kong and Macao.Online and in-store sales for the period, he added, were ""bolstered by the company's Lunar New Year marketing campaign and complemented by a longer peak selling period, given the later date of the Lunar New Year compared to last year.""Moving forward, the finance chief said the company is expecting mid-single-digit percentage revenue growth the next fiscal year, which he expects will be guided by advances in the direct-to-consumer business. He also said he expects comparable store sales to grow ""somewhere in the low single digits.""Bowden said Canada Goose's business increase in China and Asia Pacific over the past three months is in line with the view of mid-single-digit growth for the luxury business. North America, however, has been under ""a little bit more pressure,"" he said.This upbeat performance comes after the company announced back in March that it was going to cut 17% of its corporate workforce. Canada Goose reported the layoffs had generated about CA$20 million (US$14.7 million) in productivity improvements and cost savings for the fiscal fourth quarter.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"[""In this articleShares of Canada Goose surged 16% on Thursday after the company reported earnings for the fiscal fourth quarter and announced it was expecting year-over-year sales growth for fiscal year 2025.Here's how the company did:Revenue increased 22% from the same period a year ago."", 'Neil Bowden, Canada Goose\'s chief financial officer, said on an earnings call with analysts that store comparisons were ""relatively flat,"" but year-over-year sales growth for the period was led by locations in Greater China — the region comprising Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan — which saw a 29.7% increase.', 'The broader Asia-Pacific region excluding Greater China was up 29.1%, and North American sales saw an increase of 24.5%.Net income for the fiscal fourth quarter ended March 31 swung to CA$7.6 million, or 5 Canadian cents per share, from a loss of CA$10 million, or 3 Canadian cents per share, in the year-earlier period.', 'Bowden said the growth was supported by domestic shopping on the Chinese mainland, as well as mainland tourists driving ""strong growth"" in Hong Kong and Macao.', 'Online and in-store sales for the period, he added, were ""bolstered by the company\'s Lunar New Year marketing campaign and complemented by a longer peak selling period, given the later date of the Lunar New Year compared to last year.', '""Moving forward, the finance chief said the company is expecting mid-single-digit percentage revenue growth the next fiscal year, which he expects will be guided by advances in the direct-to-consumer business.', 'He also said he expects comparable store sales to grow ""somewhere in the low single digits.', '""Bowden said Canada Goose\'s business increase in China and Asia Pacific over the past three months is in line with the view of mid-single-digit growth for the luxury business.', 'North America, however, has been under ""a little bit more pressure,"" he said.', 'This upbeat performance comes after the company announced back in March that it was going to cut 17% of its corporate workforce.', 'Canada Goose reported the layoffs had generated about CA$20 million (US$14.7 million) in productivity improvements and cost savings for the fiscal fourth quarter.']",0.3174784119382864,"Bowden said the growth was supported by domestic shopping on the Chinese mainland, as well as mainland tourists driving ""strong growth"" in Hong Kong and Macao.","North America, however, has been under ""a little bit more pressure,"" he said.",0.8158493746410717,"The broader Asia-Pacific region excluding Greater China was up 29.1%, and North American sales saw an increase of 24.5%.Net income for the fiscal fourth quarter ended March 31 swung to CA$7.6 million, or 5 Canadian cents per share, from a loss of CA$10 million, or 3 Canadian cents per share, in the year-earlier period.","North America, however, has been under ""a little bit more pressure,"" he said.",2024-05-20 "Walmart is laying off, relocating hundreds of corporate workers across the country. Read the memo",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/14/walmart-to-lay-off-relocate-hundreds-of-corporate-workers.html,2024-05-14T18:56:07+0000,"In this articleWalmart is laying off hundreds of corporate workers across the country as it relocates many employees to its Arkansas headquarters.The big-box retailer confirmed the layoffs and relocations in a memo sent to employees Tuesday.In the memo, Chief People Officer Donna Morris said the move is meant to bring more of its employees back to the office after the Covid-19 pandemic. The company brought corporate employees back to its Bentonville, Arkansas, headquarters in February 2022.Now, she said, Walmart is taking that a step further. The majority of employees working remotely and in offices in Dallas, Atlanta and Toronto have been asked to relocate. Most will be moved to the company's Arkansas headquarters, but some will also relocate to offices in the San Francisco Bay Area or Hoboken, New Jersey, she said.""In addition, some parts of our business have made changes that will result in a reduction of several hundred campus roles,"" she said in the memo. ""While the overall numbers are small in percentage, we are focused on supporting each of our associates affected by these changes.""Walmart did not say how many people were affected by the cuts.The news comes days before Walmart's much-anticipated earnings report on Thursday.The layoffs are the latest cost cut for the discounter. In late April, Walmart announced it would shutter 51 health clinics across Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois and Texas. The new clinics, which offered doctor, dentist and therapy appointments, were part of Walmart Health, a broad effort by the discounter to bring lower prices to the health-care industry. It had opened the health clinics next to its big-box stores, but said in an announcement on its website that the business was not financially sustainable.Walmart is the nation's largest private employer with about 1.6 million employees, most of whom work at its stores across the country.Walmart has another reason to bring more employees to Bentonville: It is building a nearly 350-acre campus there. The major development, which is well underway, includes 12 office buildings, along with parking lots, a hotel and other amenities. The campus' first few buildings have already opened, including a fitness center and a day care.The Wall Street Journal first reported the layoffs and relocations.Read the full memo from Morris to Walmart employees:It has been a little over four years since we faced the global pandemic that reshaped our lives in many ways, including our ways of working. In February 2022, we made the decision to bring Home Office associates back into our campus offices. We believe that being together, in person, makes us better and helps us to collaborate, innovate and move even faster. We also believe it helps strengthen our culture as well as grow and develop our associates.With the goal of bringing more of us together more often, we are asking the majority of associates working remotely, and the majority of associates within our offices in Dallas, Atlanta, and our Toronto Global Tech office, to relocate. Most relocations will be to our Home Office in Bentonville, but some will be to our offices in the San Francisco Bay Area or Hoboken/New York.In addition, some parts of our business have made changes that will result in a reduction of several hundred campus roles. While the overall numbers are small in percentage, we are focused on supporting each of our associates affected by these changes.We have had discussions with associates who were directly impacted by these decisions. We will work closely with them in the coming days and months to navigate the best path forward.This is developing story. Please check back for updates.",CNBC,14/05/2024,"['In this articleWalmart is laying off hundreds of corporate workers across the country as it relocates many employees to its Arkansas headquarters.', 'The big-box retailer confirmed the layoffs and relocations in a memo sent to employees Tuesday.', 'In the memo, Chief People Officer Donna Morris said the move is meant to bring more of its employees back to the office after the Covid-19 pandemic.', 'The company brought corporate employees back to its Bentonville, Arkansas, headquarters in February 2022.Now, she said, Walmart is taking that a step further.', 'The majority of employees working remotely and in offices in Dallas, Atlanta and Toronto have been asked to relocate.', ""Most will be moved to the company's Arkansas headquarters, but some will also relocate to offices in the San Francisco Bay Area or Hoboken, New Jersey, she said."", '""In addition, some parts of our business have made changes that will result in a reduction of several hundred campus roles,"" she said in the memo. ""', 'While the overall numbers are small in percentage, we are focused on supporting each of our associates affected by these changes.', '""Walmart did not say how many people were affected by the cuts.', ""The news comes days before Walmart's much-anticipated earnings report on Thursday."", 'The layoffs are the latest cost cut for the discounter.', 'In late April, Walmart announced it would shutter 51 health clinics across Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois and Texas.', 'The new clinics, which offered doctor, dentist and therapy appointments, were part of Walmart Health, a broad effort by the discounter to bring lower prices to the health-care industry.', 'It had opened the health clinics next to its big-box stores, but said in an announcement on its website that the business was not financially sustainable.', ""Walmart is the nation's largest private employer with about 1.6 million employees, most of whom work at its stores across the country."", 'Walmart has another reason to bring more employees to Bentonville: It is building a nearly 350-acre campus there.', 'The major development, which is well underway, includes 12 office buildings, along with parking lots, a hotel and other amenities.', ""The campus' first few buildings have already opened, including a fitness center and a day care."", 'The Wall Street Journal first reported the layoffs and relocations.', 'Read the full memo from Morris to Walmart employees:It has been a little over four years since we faced the global pandemic that reshaped our lives in many ways, including our ways of working.', 'In February 2022, we made the decision to bring Home Office associates back into our campus offices.', 'We believe that being together, in person, makes us better and helps us to collaborate, innovate and move even faster.', 'We also believe it helps strengthen our culture as well as grow and develop our associates.', 'With the goal of bringing more of us together more often, we are asking the majority of associates working remotely, and the majority of associates within our offices in Dallas, Atlanta, and our Toronto Global Tech office, to relocate.', 'Most relocations will be to our Home Office in Bentonville, but some will be to our offices in the San Francisco Bay Area or Hoboken/New York.', 'In addition, some parts of our business have made changes that will result in a reduction of several hundred campus roles.', 'While the overall numbers are small in percentage, we are focused on supporting each of our associates affected by these changes.', 'We have had discussions with associates who were directly impacted by these decisions.', 'We will work closely with them in the coming days and months to navigate the best path forward.', 'This is developing story.', 'Please check back for updates.']",0.1192392778391382,"We believe that being together, in person, makes us better and helps us to collaborate, innovate and move even faster.","""Walmart did not say how many people were affected by the cuts.",0.2507317140698433,We also believe it helps strengthen our culture as well as grow and develop our associates.,"It had opened the health clinics next to its big-box stores, but said in an announcement on its website that the business was not financially sustainable.",2024-05-20 Is the move to electric cars running out of power?,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-69022771,2024-05-16T23:10:34.000Z,"Buoyant electric car sales are a must if we're to hit our climate targets. But EV sales in the West are down and if governments want them to recover it may have to be at the expense of their own economies. Any motorway driver will know the feeling: you're cruising along, miles of open road seemingly ahead and then from nowhere, a slowdown. Something similar has hit the electric vehicle market in 2024. After years of soaring sales, growth appears to be stalling. Replacing fossil-fuel-powered cars with EVs is central to the UK government's plan to meet its climate goals - road transport accounting for 12% of planetary emissions. Listen to Ben read this article The question is whether this is a blip that will soon disappear into the rear-view mirror, or is this going to prove more enduring? And if it lasts, will governments have the stomach to do what it takes to keep the net zero show on the road? The growth in EV sales has been remarkable. In 2020, there were 10 million EVs on the road, in 2023 there were 45 million. But sales need to stay remarkable, and the chart below shows just how. By 2035, the International Energy Agency (IEA) says there will need to be 790 million EVs if we're to hit net zero by the middle of the century. That implies growth in sales of 27% every single year. That's why the fact that global sales of the world's largest EV maker, Tesla, were actually lower in the first quarter of 2024 than in the same period in 2023 has raised eyebrows. China's largest EV manufacturer BYD has been vying with Tesla for the number-one spot. BYD also saw a slowdown between January and March. And EV sales in Europe fell more than 10% year-on-year in the final quarter of last year - although in the UK total sales are running up on last year. In the UK, analysts say strong EV sales in recent years were fuelled by company car purchases, thanks to generous tax breaks. But the household market is proving a tougher nut to crack, with people saying they are mostly put off by the high cost. The average price of a new EV in the US is over $60,000 (£47,433). Prices are similarly high in Europe and the UK. Large state subsidies and greater production efficiencies mean the average cost to a Chinese consumer is just $30,000. And BYD's Seagull hatchback sells for less than $10,000. China is also making massively more EVs than its domestic market needs - it could easily flood the US and European markets with cheap cars if they weren't held back by tariffs. Here is the dilemma for European and US politicians. They want cheaper EVs to facilitate the climate transition, but not at the cost of undermining their own car manufacturers - the likes of Ford and Volkswagen - and local jobs. In fact, the talk is actually of raising tariffs and other trade barriers on imports to keep out ultra-competitive Chinese EVs. That's precisely what US President Joe Biden did this week, with a new 100% tariff on Chinese EV imports. The IEA still projects a sales rise in 2024, which would keep us more or less on track for net zero. Optimists hope more people will buy EVs when cut-price second-hand vehicles come onto the market in Europe and America. But that clear road is not guaranteed. It may be that EV prices in the West do prove sticky, while China keeps churning out super-cheap vehicles. If that happens, expect that tension between the desire of Western governments to decarbonise transport and their desire to protect domestic manufacturing champions to grow even more acute. At some stage they might be forced to choose. BBC InDepth is the new home on the website and app for the best analysis and expertise from our top journalists. Under a distinctive new brand, we'll bring you fresh perspectives that challenge assumptions, and deep reporting on the biggest issues to help you make sense of a complex world. And we'll be showcasing thought-provoking content from across BBC Sounds and iPlayer too. We're starting small but thinking big, and we want to know what you think - you can send us your feedback by clicking on the button below. InDepth is the new home for the best analysis from across BBC News. Tell us what you think by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk. Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also get in touch in the following ways: If you are reading this page and can't see the form you will need to visit the mobile version of the BBC website to submit your question or comment or you can email us at HaveYourSay@bbc.co.uk. Please include your name, age and location with any submission. ",BBC,16/05/2024,"[""Buoyant electric car sales are a must if we're to hit our climate targets."", 'But EV sales in the West are down and if governments want them to recover it may have to be at the expense of their own economies.', ""Any motorway driver will know the feeling: you're cruising along, miles of open road seemingly ahead and then from nowhere, a slowdown."", 'Something similar has hit the electric vehicle market in 2024.', 'After years of soaring sales, growth appears to be stalling.', ""Replacing fossil-fuel-powered cars with EVs is central to the UK government's plan to meet its climate goals - road transport accounting for 12% of planetary emissions."", 'Listen to Ben read this article The question is whether this is a blip that will soon disappear into the rear-view mirror, or is this going to prove more enduring?', 'And if it lasts, will governments have the stomach to do what it takes to keep the net zero show on the road?', 'The growth in EV sales has been remarkable.', 'In 2020, there were 10 million EVs on the road, in 2023 there were 45 million.', 'But sales need to stay remarkable, and the chart below shows just how.', ""By 2035, the International Energy Agency (IEA) says there will need to be 790 million EVs if we're to hit net zero by the middle of the century."", 'That implies growth in sales of 27% every single year.', ""That's why the fact that global sales of the world's largest EV maker, Tesla, were actually lower in the first quarter of 2024 than in the same period in 2023 has raised eyebrows."", ""China's largest EV manufacturer BYD has been vying with Tesla for the number-one spot."", 'BYD also saw a slowdown between January and March.', 'And EV sales in Europe fell more than 10% year-on-year in the final quarter of last year - although in the UK total sales are running up on last year.', 'In the UK, analysts say strong EV sales in recent years were fuelled by company car purchases, thanks to generous tax breaks.', 'But the household market is proving a tougher nut to crack, with people saying they are mostly put off by the high cost.', 'The average price of a new EV in the US is over $60,000 (£47,433).', 'Prices are similarly high in Europe and the UK.', 'Large state subsidies and greater production efficiencies mean the average cost to a Chinese consumer is just $30,000.', ""And BYD's Seagull hatchback sells for less than $10,000."", ""China is also making massively more EVs than its domestic market needs - it could easily flood the US and European markets with cheap cars if they weren't held back by tariffs."", 'Here is the dilemma for European and US politicians.', 'They want cheaper EVs to facilitate the climate transition, but not at the cost of undermining their own car manufacturers - the likes of Ford and Volkswagen - and local jobs.', 'In fact, the talk is actually of raising tariffs and other trade barriers on imports to keep out ultra-competitive Chinese EVs.', ""That's precisely what US President Joe Biden did this week, with a new 100% tariff on Chinese EV imports."", 'The IEA still projects a sales rise in 2024, which would keep us more or less on track for net zero.', 'Optimists hope more people will buy EVs when cut-price second-hand vehicles come onto the market in Europe and America.', 'But that clear road is not guaranteed.', 'It may be that EV prices in the West do prove sticky, while China keeps churning out super-cheap vehicles.', 'If that happens, expect that tension between the desire of Western governments to decarbonise transport and their desire to protect domestic manufacturing champions to grow even more acute.', 'At some stage they might be forced to choose.', 'BBC InDepth is the new home on the website and app for the best analysis and expertise from our top journalists.', ""Under a distinctive new brand, we'll bring you fresh perspectives that challenge assumptions, and deep reporting on the biggest issues to help you make sense of a complex world."", ""And we'll be showcasing thought-provoking content from across BBC Sounds and iPlayer too."", ""We're starting small but thinking big, and we want to know what you think - you can send us your feedback by clicking on the button below."", 'InDepth is the new home for the best analysis from across BBC News.', 'Tell us what you think by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.', 'Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist.', ""You can also get in touch in the following ways: If you are reading this page and can't see the form you will need to visit the mobile version of the BBC website to submit your question or comment or you can email us at HaveYourSay@bbc.co.uk."", 'Please include your name, age and location with any submission.']",0.2199758373447584,"In the UK, analysts say strong EV sales in recent years were fuelled by company car purchases, thanks to generous tax breaks.",At some stage they might be forced to choose.,0.0719603268723738,"The IEA still projects a sales rise in 2024, which would keep us more or less on track for net zero.","That's why the fact that global sales of the world's largest EV maker, Tesla, were actually lower in the first quarter of 2024 than in the same period in 2023 has raised eyebrows.",2024-05-20 Opinion: The drama around Sam Altman is an urgent warning,https://edition.cnn.com/2023/11/21/opinions/sam-altman-openai-ouster-danger-filipovic/index.html," Published 9:50 AM EST, Tue November 21, 2023 ","The biggest tech news this week is the ouster of Sam Altman from his role as CEO of OpenAI, a move that has shaken the company and the industry. Hundreds of OpenAI employees have threatened to resign. Altman has already moved on to a role at Microsoft. And OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is on its third CEO in as many days. It’s all very juicy. But this drama should also be raising larger questions, far beyond one company’s internal hirings and firings, including: Who are the people making the decisions that will determine so much of our technological future? What guiding principles are they using to make those decisions? And how should other institutions – governments, non-tech industries, global alliances, regulatory bodies – reign in the worst excesses of potentially dangerous AI innovators? OpenAI was founded as a nonprofit, with an explicit mission to harness what may soon be superhuman intelligence “to benefit humanity as a whole.” But that sensibility hasn’t lasted. The company now has a multi-billion-dollar for-profit arm. They have been developing new technologies at lightning speed, and sometimes sending them out to the public before some employees believed they were ready. The company has already reportedly invented an AI technology so dangerous they will never release it – but they also won’t tell reporters or the public exactly what it is. This dynamic – a potentially dangerous technology developed at extreme speed, largely behind closed doors – is partly to blame for Altman’s firing. The OpenAI board, according to CNN’s David Goldman, worried that “the company was making the technological equivalent of a nuclear bomb, and its caretaker, Sam Altman, was moving so fast that he risked a global catastrophe.” At particular issue seemed to be Altman’s efforts to make the tools behind ChatGPT available to anyone who wanted to make their own version of the chatbot. This could be widely disastrous, some board members worried. But then they fired him without warning, and apparently without involving Microsoft, the company’s largest shareholder. Now, Altman is at the new AI group at Microsoft, and one has to wonder if the oversight and caution there will be on par with that at OpenAI, or if he’ll be handed carte blanche to push as fast and hard as he wants. And for all the justified reticence of the OpenAI board, the company has carried out much of its work in secrecy – without the public really understanding what a handful of unaccountable technologists are building, and how it is nearly guaranteed to indelibly change their lives. AI is broadly understood to have the potential to reshape vast swaths of human existence. At the very least, it seems nearly guaranteed to change how we process information, how we communicate, how we learn and how we work (and if we work). And the ramifications could be much more extreme. AI technologies have already demonstrated the ability to lie and to cover their tracks. They have already been able to suggest the design to make a virus spread more quickly. Many researchers acutely understand just how quickly these machines could develop the capacity to annihilate us, including Altman: He has a prepper’s paradise prepared in Big Sur, complete with guns and “gas masks from the Israeli Defense Force” in case AI goes off the rails and the robots go to war against humans, according to reporting in the New Yorker. But don’t worry, he told an Atlantic reporter: If AI is determined to wipe us out, “no gas mask is helping anyone.” (If you want an excellent and terrifying rundown of AI’s risks – at least those we understand right now, which are almost certainly a mere sliver of the looming perils – the Atlantic profile of Altman and his technology is worth a read). AI is very exciting technology. But it is also a potentially very dangerous one, and not in the social media sense of “it may give us bad self-esteem and make us lonelier” but in the sense of “it could break down human societies and kill us all.” Given the life-altering potential of AI – that even if it doesn’t kill us all, it will almost certainly change human existence in unprecedented ways at unprecedented speed – we all have a stake in how it’s being developed. And yet the development is being left to a handful of people (who seem to be largely men) in Silicon Valley, and other tech pockets around the globe. And we all have a stake in whose interests AI will serve – and right now, its development is being funded with billions of dollars by people expecting to make a huge profit. Do the interests of the public align with the interests of the shareholders to whom profit-driven, potentially tremendously lucrative-for-a-few companies are beholden? Or with the interests of tech entrepreneurs who are primarily excited about being at the forefront of the AI revolution, regardless of the potential human costs? One thing is clear: AI is coming. And how it is built and unleashed on the public matters more than perhaps any technology of the past century. It is, indeed, up there with the atom bomb in its destructive potential – except likely more difficult to regulate and control. “Regulation” does not begin to scratch the surface of what’s needed to make sure that the AI future is not a catastrophic one, especially since the development of AI is now a massive international arms race, with particularly horrific implications if bad actors develop this technology first. But regulation is, at minimum, a necessary step. So is transparency: In the US, companies have wide leverage to work behind a veil of secrecy, and much of what AI companies do is kept secret to stymy competition. But the public certainly has a right to understand what life-altering technologies are set to be inflicted upon us, and what the creators are doing to protect humanity – our jobs, our communities, our families, our connections, our educations and our abilities to build a life of purpose, but also our lives and our safety. The Altman story is fascinating because Altman is the most powerful figure in AI technology, which in effect makes him one of the most powerful men in the world. But that should give us pause: Who is he, what power does he hold, what is he doing with it, who does he answer to, and are we comfortable with this much life-altering potential being held by a few unaccountable people?",CNN,21/11/2023,"['The biggest tech news this week is theousterof Sam Altman from his role as CEO of OpenAI, a move that has shaken the company and the industry.', 'Hundreds of OpenAI employees have threatened toresign.', 'Altman has alreadymoved onto a role at Microsoft.', 'And OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is on itsthird CEOin as many days.', 'It’s all very juicy.', 'But this drama should also be raising larger questions, far beyond one company’s internal hirings and firings, including: Who are the people making the decisionsthat will determine so much of our technological future?', 'What guiding principles are they using to make those decisions?', 'And how should other institutions – governments, non-tech industries, global alliances, regulatory bodies – reign in the worst excesses of potentially dangerous AI innovators?', 'OpenAI was founded as a nonprofit, with an explicit mission to harness what may soon be superhuman intelligence “to benefit humanity as a whole.”', 'But that sensibility hasn’t lasted.', 'The company now has a multi-billion-dollar for-profit arm.', 'They have been developing new technologies at lightning speed, and sometimes sending them out to the publicbefore some employees believed they were ready.', 'The company has already reportedly invented an AI technology so dangerous they will never release it – but they alsowon’t tellreporters or the public exactly what it is.', 'This dynamic – a potentially dangerous technology developed at extreme speed, largely behind closed doors – is partly to blame for Altman’s firing.', 'The OpenAI board, according toCNN’s David Goldman, worried that “the company was making the technological equivalent of a nuclear bomb, and its caretaker, Sam Altman, was moving so fast that he risked a global catastrophe.”', 'At particular issue seemed to be Altman’s efforts to make the tools behind ChatGPT available to anyone who wanted to make their own version of the chatbot.', 'This could be widely disastrous, some board members worried.', 'But then they fired him without warning, and apparently without involving Microsoft, the company’s largest shareholder.', 'Now, Altman is at the new AI group at Microsoft, and one has to wonder if the oversight and caution there will be on par with that at OpenAI, or if he’ll be handed carte blanche to push as fast and hard as he wants.', 'And for all the justified reticence of the OpenAI board, the company has carried out much of its work in secrecy – without the public really understanding what a handful of unaccountable technologists are building, and how it is nearly guaranteed to indelibly change their lives.', 'AI is broadly understood to have the potential to reshape vast swaths of human existence.', 'At the very least, it seems nearly guaranteed to change how we process information, how we communicate, how we learn and how we work (and if we work).', 'And the ramifications could be much more extreme.', 'AI technologies have already demonstrated the abilityto lie and to cover their tracks.', 'They have already been able tosuggest the designto make a virus spread more quickly.', 'Many researchersacutely understandjust how quickly these machines could develop the capacity to annihilate us, including Altman: He has a prepper’s paradise prepared in Big Sur, complete with guns and “gas masks from the Israeli Defense Force” in case AI goes off the rails and the robots go to war against humans,according to reporting in the New Yorker.', 'But don’t worry, he told an Atlantic reporter: If AI is determined to wipe us out, “no gas mask is helping anyone.” (', 'If you want an excellent and terrifying rundown of AI’s risks – at least those we understand right now, which are almost certainly a mere sliver of the looming perils –the Atlantic profile of Altman and his technologyis worth a read).', 'AI is very exciting technology.', 'But it is also a potentially very dangerous one, and not in the social media sense of “it may give us bad self-esteem and make us lonelier” but in the sense of “it could break down human societies and kill us all.”', 'Given the life-altering potential of AI – that even if it doesn’t kill us all, it will almost certainly change human existence in unprecedented ways at unprecedented speed – we all have a stake in how it’s being developed.', 'And yet the development is being left to a handful of people (who seem to belargelymen) in Silicon Valley, and other tech pockets around the globe.', 'And we all have a stake in whose interests AI will serve – and right now, its development is being funded with billions of dollars by people expecting to make a huge profit.', 'Do the interests of the public align with the interests of the shareholders to whom profit-driven, potentially tremendously lucrative-for-a-few companies are beholden?', 'Or with the interests of tech entrepreneurs who are primarily excited about being at the forefront of the AI revolution, regardless of the potential human costs?', 'One thing is clear: AI is coming.', 'And how it is built and unleashed on the public matters more than perhaps any technology of the past century.', 'It is, indeed, up there with the atom bomb in its destructive potential – except likely more difficult to regulate and control.', '“Regulation” does not begin to scratch the surface of what’s needed to make sure that the AI future is not a catastrophic one, especially since the development of AI is now a massive international arms race, with particularly horrific implications if bad actors develop this technology first.', 'But regulation is, at minimum, a necessary step.', 'So is transparency: In the US, companies have wide leverage to work behind a veil of secrecy, and much of what AI companies do is kept secret to stymy competition.', 'But the public certainly has a right to understand what life-altering technologies are set to be inflicted upon us, and what the creators are doing to protect humanity – our jobs, our communities, our families, our connections, our educations and our abilities to build a life of purpose, but also our lives and our safety.', 'The Altman story is fascinating because Altman is the most powerful figure in AI technology, which in effect makes him one of the most powerful men in the world.', 'But that should give us pause: Who is he, what power does he hold, what is he doing with it, who does he answer to, and are we comfortable with this much life-altering potential being held by a few unaccountable people?']",0.0034737194649936,"But the public certainly has a right to understand what life-altering technologies are set to be inflicted upon us, and what the creators are doing to protect humanity – our jobs, our communities, our families, our connections, our educations and our abilities to build a life of purpose, but also our lives and our safety.","But it is also a potentially very dangerous one, and not in the social media sense of “it may give us bad self-esteem and make us lonelier” but in the sense of “it could break down human societies and kill us all.”",-0.2999433577060699,AI technologies have already demonstrated the abilityto lie and to cover their tracks.,"But it is also a potentially very dangerous one, and not in the social media sense of “it may give us bad self-esteem and make us lonelier” but in the sense of “it could break down human societies and kill us all.”",2024-05-20 "Spirit Airlines gets rid of change and cancellation fees, joining Frontier",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/20/spirit-airlines-ends-change-fees.html,2024-05-20T16:42:47+0000,"In this articleSpirit Airlines is doing away with both change and cancellation fees, effective immediately, days after Frontier's similar announcement, part of an overhaul of the country's biggest discount carriers' longtime strategy.Prior to the new rule, Spirit used to charge anywhere between $69 and $119 for ticket changes and cancellations, depending on how close to departure the customer made the change.""This new policy is among the best in the industry because it applies to each and every guest,"" Spirit said in a statement to CNBC. ""We have many other enhancements in the works and look forward to sharing more soon.""The changes mark a shift for budget airlines' longtime pricing approach, which includes low base fares to attract customers and add-on fees for advanced seating assignments, bottled water and cabin baggage. Ancillary revenue routinely surpasses those airlines' ticket prices.""As we continue to see the demand and competitive environments develop, we know that we must also change with the times,"" Spirit's Chief Commercial Officer Matt Klein said on an earnings call earlier this month. ""We will continue to test out new merchandising strategies, which we anticipate will change how we think about the components of total revenue generation.""Both Spirit and Frontier are trying to return to profitability in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, while larger airlines that offer both bare-bones fares to domestic destinations and big international networks have posted profits.Most larger rivals such as Delta, American, Alaska and United got rid of change fees during the pandemic except for the cheapest, most restrictive tickets. Southwest Airlines does not charge customers a flight-change fee.Along with getting rid of change fees, Frontier also announced Friday that it will start offering bundles that include add-on options such as early boarding and checked baggage that they previously offered a la carte. Spirit is also offering bundled packages with varying prices that include perks such as checked bags.President Joe Biden and the Department of Transportation have been cracking down on what they deem ""junk fees."" As part of that push, the DOT issued a new rule requiring airlines to be upfront about add-on fees such as those for checked or carry-on baggage, which was subsequently challenged by a slew of airlines.Spirit said the end of cancellation fees were not tied to the new rules.The Biden administration also recently issued a new rule requiring airlines to offer automatic cash refunds for cancellations rather than in response to a customer's request.",CNBC,20/05/2024,"[""In this articleSpirit Airlines is doing away with both change and cancellation fees, effective immediately, days after Frontier's similar announcement, part of an overhaul of the country's biggest discount carriers' longtime strategy."", 'Prior to the new rule, Spirit used to charge anywhere between $69 and $119 for ticket changes and cancellations, depending on how close to departure the customer made the change.', '""This new policy is among the best in the industry because it applies to each and every guest,"" Spirit said in a statement to CNBC. ""', 'We have many other enhancements in the works and look forward to sharing more soon.', '""The changes mark a shift for budget airlines\' longtime pricing approach, which includes low base fares to attract customers and add-on fees for advanced seating assignments, bottled water and cabin baggage.', ""Ancillary revenue routinely surpasses those airlines' ticket prices."", '""As we continue to see the demand and competitive environments develop, we know that we must also change with the times,"" Spirit\'s Chief Commercial Officer Matt Klein said on an earnings call earlier this month. ""', 'We will continue to test out new merchandising strategies, which we anticipate will change how we think about the components of total revenue generation.', '""Both Spirit and Frontier are trying to return to profitability in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, while larger airlines that offer both bare-bones fares to domestic destinations and big international networks have posted profits.', 'Most larger rivals such as Delta, American, Alaska and United got rid of change fees during the pandemic except for the cheapest, most restrictive tickets.', 'Southwest Airlines does not charge customers a flight-change fee.', 'Along with getting rid of change fees, Frontier also announced Friday that it will start offering bundles that include add-on options such as early boarding and checked baggage that they previously offered a la carte.', 'Spirit is also offering bundled packages with varying prices that include perks such as checked bags.', 'President Joe Biden and the Department of Transportation have been cracking down on what they deem ""junk fees.""', 'As part of that push, the DOT issued a new rule requiring airlines to be upfront about add-on fees such as those for checked or carry-on baggage, which was subsequently challenged by a slew of airlines.', 'Spirit said the end of cancellation fees were not tied to the new rules.', ""The Biden administration also recently issued a new rule requiring airlines to offer automatic cash refunds for cancellations rather than in response to a customer's request.""]",0.2186504330868678,"""This new policy is among the best in the industry because it applies to each and every guest,"" Spirit said in a statement to CNBC. """,,0.5704053997993469,"""Both Spirit and Frontier are trying to return to profitability in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, while larger airlines that offer both bare-bones fares to domestic destinations and big international networks have posted profits.","President Joe Biden and the Department of Transportation have been cracking down on what they deem ""junk fees.""",2024-05-20 Make your money work when you’re not: Creating an income-producing portfolio,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/success/income-producing-portfolio-passive-income/index.html," Published 6:00 AM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","If you have savings and investments to support you in retirement — or, before then, if you take an unpaid leave from your job — you can put that money to work in ways that help cover your short-term income needs without sacrificing your long-term security. How much income you can generate depends on several factors, including how big your nest egg is, how it’s invested, where interest rates go and your risk tolerance. A lot goes into creating and managing an income-producing portfolio that works for you. But here are some basics to consider. Ideally, you want to begin planning three to five years ahead of when you plan to draw income from your portfolio. Start by asking: How do I want to occupy my time when I leave my job? Will you still do paid work, just not put in as many hours? Do you want to travel a lot? Go back to school? Build an eco-friendly home? Whatever your choices, the more specific you can be, the easier it will be to assess your actual income needs when the time comes, said certified financial planner David Seufer, founder of Gravitas Wealth Planning. What fixed sources of income will I have? That is, steady payments that won’t fluctuate. Social Security benefits are the most typical example. (You can get an estimate specific to your earnings history here.) If you’ll get a pension, count that too. How much will I spend? Knowing your expenses will give you a good sense of the income you’ll need. Marguerita Cheng, a certified financial planner and founder of Blue Ocean Global Wealth, asks her clients to write down what they consider to be their “core and essential” expenses — she doesn’t call them “fixed,” because some are not, like your energy bill, which can be seasonal. She also asks them to write about their “variable or lifestyle” expenses, which reflect what you do regularly that is important to you. If there are new expenses you will incur based on your plans, add those in. Or if you plan to move, account for how your living expenses may change. Take the income you think you’ll need and subtract from that the income you expect. For example, if you need $65,000 a year but will only bring in $40,000, you’ll need to generate the other $25,000. There are several ways savings and investments can do that, or at least cover part of that shortfall. Among the most common is interest from high-yield savings accounts, money market accounts, certificates of deposit, Treasury bills and government and corporate bonds. Dividend are another income source. But you don’t just want dividend-paying equities in your portfolio. “When one invests only in stocks that pay dividends or that only pay the highest dividends, one may miss out on the capital appreciation potential of stocks that pay no dividend at all or much lower dividend rates,” said David Edmisten, a certified financial planner and founder of Next Phase Financial Planning. Instead, Edmisten recommends having both growth stocks and dividend-paying stocks. That way, he said “[you] collect dividends for income, but also generate capital appreciation to help combat inflation.” Capital gains, which result from selling an asset for more than you bought it, are another income source. Keep in mind you don’t need to buy individual stocks and bonds. You can get exposure to both through low-cost mutual funds and exchange-traded funds. You want to have enough cash to support you in the near term — and to protect you from having to sell assets at a loss in market downturns. But you also need long-term growth in your portfolio because, even when you retire, you may live for 25 or more years. Edmisten recommends using a bucket strategy: • Keep 18 to 24 months of expenses in cash or cash-equivalents, which include high-yield savings accounts, short-term CDs and Treasury bills. • For money you’ll need in three to five years, use short-term corporate bonds as well as longer-term CDs. • For years six through 10, have a mix of stocks and longer-term bonds. • And for years 11 and up, your money should just be in stocks. If your cash reserves are running down faster than you expect, you can replenish them in several ways. You can stop reinvesting some of your dividends and instead take the cash payout. You can take some capital gains off the table and rebalance your portfolio, Cheng said. Say your plan allocates 20% of your portfolio to a given asset class (e.g., large-cap growth stocks) and it grows to 25%. You can sell shares equal to that 5% difference and put the money into your cash accounts. Or, if you don’t have a lot of gains, you might liquidate some of your bonds in your three-to-five-year bucket so you don’t have to sell long-term growth assets, Edmisten said. Another option: If you or your spouse are still working and maxing out contributions to a workplace retirement savings plan or IRA, you might temporarily reduce them. To reduce your cash needs, you also might look to see what expenses you can trim. The biggest costs for many people are housing, transportation and health care, Cheng said. Having a diversified income stream gives you flexibility to pull from one type of investment over another when it’s most advantageous to do so. Beyond dividend-paying stocks, bonds and interest-bearing instruments, some people may want annuities to be part of their income stream. You can purchase them in exchange for the guarantee of a steady paycheck over a given number of years. “Annuities can make sense in certain situations — with clients who are a little risk averse … especially if they don’t have a pension or other sources of guaranteed income,” Seufer said. But annuities are complex. They can be expensive and give you less flexibility to make changes if your life changes. So be informed. “Understand the contract. And understand what the limitations are,” Edmisten said. You also will want some flexibility to time which accounts to draw from, based on their tax consequences, Seufer said. For example, a pre-tax 401(k), a taxable brokerage account and tax-free money in a Roth IRA offer a good mix of options. Similarly, some investments generate tax-free income at the federal or state level, such as Treasury bills and municipal bonds. You may feel fine managing everything on your own. If not, you may want to pay a flat fee to a fee-only certified financial planner to provide a roadmap for how to set things up and to offer periodic guidance throughout the year. Or you may be interested in letting a CFP not only come up with a plan but directly manage your investments, too, if they’re qualified. Tell the planner what you want. It could be guidance on cash flow management, taxes or optimizing when you and your spouse should take Social Security. “It’s okay to be direct about where you think you need help,” Cheng said. And if you do decide to let a firm manage your nest egg, ideally you don’t want to pay more than 1% of your assets a year for that service, she suggested.",CNN,20/05/2024,"['If you have savings and investments to support you in retirement — or, before then, if you take an unpaid leave from your job — you can put that money to work in ways that help cover your short-term income needs without sacrificing your long-term security.', 'How much income you can generate depends on several factors, including how big your nest egg is, how it’s invested, where interest rates go and your risk tolerance.', 'A lot goes into creating and managing an income-producing portfolio that works for you.', 'But here are some basics to consider.', 'Ideally, you want to begin planning three to five years ahead of when you plan to draw income from your portfolio.', 'Start by asking: How do I want to occupy my time when I leave my job?', 'Will you still do paid work, just not put in as many hours?', 'Do you want to travel a lot?', 'Go back to school?', 'Build an eco-friendly home?', 'Whatever your choices, the more specific you can be, the easier it will be to assess your actual income needs when the time comes, said certified financial planner David Seufer, founder of Gravitas Wealth Planning.', 'What fixed sources of income will I have?', 'That is, steady payments that won’t fluctuate.', 'Social Security benefits are the most typical example. (', 'You can get an estimate specific to your earnings history here.)', 'If you’ll get a pension, count that too.', 'How much will I spend?', 'Knowing your expenses will give you a good sense of the income you’ll need.', 'Marguerita Cheng, a certified financial planner and founder of Blue Ocean Global Wealth, asks her clients to write down what they consider to be their “core and essential” expenses — she doesn’t call them “fixed,” because some are not, like your energy bill, which can be seasonal.', 'She also asks them to write about their “variable or lifestyle” expenses, which reflect what you do regularly that is important to you.', 'If there are new expenses you will incur based on your plans, add those in.', 'Or if you plan to move, account for how your living expenses may change.', 'Take the income you think you’ll need and subtract from that the income you expect.', 'For example, if you need $65,000 a year but will only bring in $40,000, you’ll need to generate the other $25,000.', 'There are several ways savings and investments can do that, or at least cover part of that shortfall.', 'Among the most common is interest from high-yield savings accounts, money market accounts, certificates of deposit, Treasury bills and government and corporate bonds.', 'Dividend are another income source.', 'But you don’t just want dividend-paying equities in your portfolio.', '“When one invests only in stocks that pay dividends or that only pay the highest dividends, one may miss out on the capital appreciation potential of stocks that pay no dividend at all or much lower dividend rates,” said David Edmisten, a certified financial planner and founder of Next Phase Financial Planning.', 'Instead, Edmisten recommends having both growth stocks and dividend-paying stocks.', 'That way, he said “[you] collect dividends for income, but also generate capital appreciation to help combat inflation.”', 'Capital gains, which result from selling an asset for more than you bought it, are another income source.', 'Keep in mind you don’t need to buy individual stocks and bonds.', 'You can get exposure to both through low-cost mutual funds and exchange-traded funds.', 'You want to have enough cash to support you in the near term — and to protect you from having to sell assets at a loss in market downturns.', 'But you also need long-term growth in your portfolio because, even when you retire, you may live for 25 or more years.', 'Edmisten recommends using a bucket strategy: • Keep 18 to 24 months of expenses in cash or cash-equivalents, which include high-yield savings accounts, short-term CDs and Treasury bills.', '• For money you’ll need in three to five years, use short-term corporate bonds as well as longer-term CDs.', '• For years six through 10, have a mix of stocks and longer-term bonds.', '• And for years 11 and up, your money should just be in stocks.', 'If your cash reserves are running down faster than you expect, you can replenish them in several ways.', 'You can stop reinvesting some of your dividends and instead take the cash payout.', 'You can take some capital gains off the table and rebalance your portfolio, Cheng said.', 'Say your plan allocates 20% of your portfolio to a given asset class (e.g., large-cap growth stocks) and it grows to 25%.', 'You can sell shares equal to that 5% difference and put the money into your cash accounts.', 'Or, if you don’t have a lot of gains, you might liquidate some of your bonds in your three-to-five-year bucket so you don’t have to sell long-term growth assets, Edmisten said.', 'Another option: If you or your spouse are still working and maxing out contributions to a workplace retirement savings plan or IRA, you might temporarily reduce them.', 'To reduce your cash needs, you also might look to see what expenses you can trim.', 'The biggest costs for many people are housing, transportation and health care, Cheng said.', 'Having a diversified income stream gives you flexibility to pull from one type of investment over another when it’s most advantageous to do so.', 'Beyond dividend-paying stocks, bonds and interest-bearing instruments, some people may want annuities to be part of their income stream.', 'You can purchase them in exchange for the guarantee of a steady paycheck over a given number of years.', '“Annuities can make sense in certain situations — with clients who are a little risk averse … especially if they don’t have a pension or other sources of guaranteed income,” Seufer said.', 'But annuities are complex.', 'They can be expensive and give you less flexibility to make changes if your life changes.', 'So be informed. “', 'Understand the contract.', 'And understand what the limitations are,” Edmisten said.', 'You also will want some flexibility to time which accounts to draw from, based on their tax consequences, Seufer said.', 'For example, a pre-tax 401(k), a taxable brokerage account and tax-free money in a Roth IRA offer a good mix of options.', 'Similarly, some investments generate tax-free income at the federal or state level, such as Treasury bills and municipal bonds.', 'You may feel fine managing everything on your own.', 'If not, you may want to pay a flat fee to a fee-only certified financial planner to provide a roadmap for how to set things up and to offer periodic guidance throughout the year.', 'Or you may be interested in letting a CFP not only come up with a plan but directly manage your investments, too, if they’re qualified.', 'Tell the planner what you want.', 'It could be guidance on cash flow management, taxes or optimizing when you and your spouse should take Social Security. “', 'It’s okay to be direct about where you think you need help,” Cheng said.', 'And if you do decide to let a firm manage your nest egg, ideally you don’t want to pay more than 1% of your assets a year for that service, she suggested.']",0.2456354664188334,"If you have savings and investments to support you in retirement — or, before then, if you take an unpaid leave from your job — you can put that money to work in ways that help cover your short-term income needs without sacrificing your long-term security.","“When one invests only in stocks that pay dividends or that only pay the highest dividends, one may miss out on the capital appreciation potential of stocks that pay no dividend at all or much lower dividend rates,” said David Edmisten, a certified financial planner and founder of Next Phase Financial Planning.",0.3683333992958069,"There are several ways savings and investments can do that, or at least cover part of that shortfall.","“When one invests only in stocks that pay dividends or that only pay the highest dividends, one may miss out on the capital appreciation potential of stocks that pay no dividend at all or much lower dividend rates,” said David Edmisten, a certified financial planner and founder of Next Phase Financial Planning.",2024-05-20 It’s back: Targeted Amex card holders can get up to 30% off at Amazon,https://edition.cnn.com/cnn-underscored/deals/amazon-amex-discount-promotion," 11:21 AM EST, Wed February 14, 2024 ","Most American Express card members typically think of their Amex points as opportunities for amazing travel opportunities. While that’s true, there’s another lesser-known use for them — redeeming them for purchases at Amazon. Right now, you may be eligible for an Amazon promotion where you can save big on Amazon purchases by redeeming as little as one Amex point. Targeted American Express card members can save as much as 30% on their next Amazon purchase, for up to $30 in savings when you use Amex points to pay for at least a portion of your purchase at checkout. However, your offer may be higher or lower. This offer is set to expire on June 30, 2024, so even if you aren’t in the market to shop at Amazon right now, you have some time to take advantage of the savings. That said, Amazon also states it will deactivate the offer after 24,167 customers have redeemed it. With many Amazon discounted offers, scoring the deal can be a little complicated. But we’re going to take you through it step by step to make sure you’re getting as much of a discount as possible when you’re shopping at Amazon. To start, you must have an American Express card that earns Membership Rewards points. Amex cards that earn other types of rewards, such as cash back or airline miles, won’t work. But there are plenty of Amex cards that earn Membership Rewards points — a small sampling of them is at the end of this story. Next, you’ll need to link your Amazon and American Express accounts. Add your American Express card as a payment method in your Amazon account, if you haven’t already. Then look for the option to enroll in “Shop with Points” under the “Your Account” tab, and click the “Enroll” button for the Amex card you just added. Once your accounts are connected, you’ll need to activate the offer by clicking on this link. Remember, this is a targeted promotion, so not everyone will be eligible for it — you could be targeted for any one of the offers or none of them. When you click on the link, if you see a message that you’re not eligible, then you’re unfortunately not targeted for this particular promotion. But even if you’re not targeted, don’t give up hope. If you just enrolled in “Shop with Points,” you may need to wait 24 hours for Amazon’s records to refresh before knowing if you’re targeted, so check back in a day or so. If you’re eligible, activate the offer by clicking on the “Activate now” button — the enrollment page will indicate your particular discount. You can then shop at Amazon as you normally would, though only products sold and shipped by Amazon are eligible for these discounts. Additionally, Amazon gift cards are excluded, though other third-party retailer gift cards sold by Amazon might be eligible. But wait! There’s one more step. When you’re ready to check out, you’ll want to make sure to select your linked American Express card as your payment method. Then you’ll need to use at least 1 point to pay for your purchase for the discount to apply. When paying with Amex Membership Rewards points at Amazon, 1 point equals 0.7 cents. That’s not the best value you can get for Amex points. Frequent flyer website The Points Guy values Membership Rewards points as high as 2 cents each when redeemed for travel. However, it’s important to note that you don’t have to pay for your entire Amazon purchase with points to get these discounts. In fact, you can use just 1 point and pay for the rest with your Amex card, and you’ll still see the discount applied to your order. However, some accounts might see that you need to redeem slightly more points — 714 to be exact — to receive the savings, so make sure to check the terms of your exact offer. To pay with the minimum number of points required, enter $0.01 in the points section at checkout, which will apply just 1 point to your payment, You can use any number of points you want, but if you don’t make this change, Amazon may automatically apply the maximum number of points to cover the entire purchase, so you’ll want to make sure to update the amount before you place the order. Once you’ve applied at least 1 point to your payment, you’ll see the discount added to your order. The discount will apply on every order you place through June 30 until you hit the total maximum in savings — which will depend on your particular offer. Let’s take a look at some examples of how you can apply this discount to your upcoming Amazon purchases, even if you don’t need anything from Amazon right at the moment. With airlines having regular delays and cancellations over the last year, placing an Apple AirTag on your luggage can be a great way to track the location of your belongings. An Apple AirTag 4 Pack is currently priced at $78.99 before taxes and shipping, but if you’re targeted for the 30% off American Express offer, that’ll bring the pack down to $55.30, or around $13.83 per AirTag before tax. Or, if you’re hoping to pick up a set of new Apple AirPods Pro 2, right now Amazon is selling them for $189.99. But you can knock that down even further to as low as $159.99 before taxes if you’re targeted for this offer. Even if you aren’t eligible for any of these particular Amex promotions, offers like this typically resurface many times throughout the year, so keep on checking back. Amazon often runs similar promotions for other credit cards, so check out our guides to discounts for Chase and Discover card holders to see what’s available. You might also find that even if you aren’t eligible now for one of these offers, you could magically become targeted in a few weeks, so keep on checking the link to see if you’ve been granted access. Amazon has been eagerly offers some lucrative promotions over the last few years, so keep your credit card accounts linked to your Amazon account, and if you’re targeted for any of these offers, make sure you use them before they expire at the end of the year. Also, make sure you read our guide to the best credit cards for Amazon to be sure you’re using the right card when you buy at Amazon. Looking for a travel credit card? Find out which cards CNN Underscored Money chose as the best travel credit cards currently available.",CNN,14/02/2024,"['Most American Express card members typically think of their Amex points as opportunities for amazing travel opportunities.', 'While that’s true, there’s another lesser-known use for them — redeeming them for purchases at Amazon.', 'Right now, you may be eligible for anAmazonpromotion where you can save big on Amazon purchases by redeeming as little as one Amex point.', 'Targeted American Express card members cansave as much as 30% on their next Amazon purchase, for up to $30 in savings when you use Amex points to pay for at least a portion of your purchase at checkout.', 'However, your offer may be higher or lower.', 'This offer is set to expire on June 30, 2024, so even if you aren’t in the market to shop at Amazon right now, you have some time to take advantage of the savings.', 'That said, Amazon also states it will deactivate the offer after 24,167 customers have redeemed it.', 'With many Amazon discounted offers, scoring the deal can be a little complicated.', 'But we’re going to take you through it step by step to make sure you’re getting as much of a discount as possible when you’re shopping atAmazon.', 'To start, you must have an American Express card that earns Membership Rewards points.', 'Amex cards that earn other types of rewards, such as cash back or airline miles, won’t work.', 'But there are plenty of Amex cards that earn Membership Rewards points — a small sampling of them is at the end of this story.', 'Next, you’ll need tolink your Amazon and American Express accounts.', 'Add your American Express card as a payment method in your Amazon account, if you haven’t already.', 'Then look for the option toenroll in “Shop with Points”under the “Your Account” tab, and click the “Enroll” button for the Amex card you just added.', 'Once your accounts are connected, you’ll need to activate the offer byclicking on this link.', 'Remember, this is a targeted promotion, so not everyone will be eligible for it — you could be targeted for any one of the offers or none of them.', 'When you click on the link, if you see a message that you’re not eligible, then you’re unfortunately not targeted for this particular promotion.', 'But even if you’re not targeted, don’t give up hope.', 'If you just enrolled in “Shop with Points,” you may need to wait 24 hours for Amazon’s records to refresh before knowing if you’re targeted, so check back in a day or so.', 'If you’re eligible, activate the offer byclicking on the “Activate now” button— the enrollment page will indicate your particular discount.', 'You can thenshop at Amazonas you normally would, though only products sold and shipped by Amazon are eligible for these discounts.', 'Additionally, Amazon gift cards are excluded, though otherthird-party retailer gift cardssold by Amazon might be eligible.', 'But wait!', 'There’s one more step.', 'When you’re ready to check out, you’ll want to make sure to select your linked American Express card as your payment method.', 'Then you’ll need to use at least 1 point to pay for your purchase for the discount to apply.', 'When paying with Amex Membership Rewards points at Amazon, 1 point equals 0.7 cents.', 'That’s not the best value you can get for Amex points.', 'Frequent flyer websiteThe Points Guyvalues Membership Rewards points as high as 2 cents each when redeemed for travel.', 'However, it’s important to note that you don’t have to pay for your entireAmazonpurchase with points to get these discounts.', 'In fact,you can use just 1 point and pay for the rest with your Amex card, and you’ll still see the discount applied to your order.', 'However, some accounts might see that you need to redeem slightly more points —714 to be exact —to receive the savings, so make sure to check the terms of your exact offer.', 'To pay with the minimum number of points required, enter $0.01 in the points section at checkout, which will apply just 1 point to your payment, You can use any number of points you want, but if you don’t make this change,Amazonmay automatically apply the maximum number of points to cover the entire purchase, so you’ll want to make sure to update the amount before you place the order.', 'Once you’ve applied at least 1 point to your payment, you’ll see the discount added to your order.', 'The discount will apply on every order you place through June 30 until you hit the total maximum in savings —which will depend on your particular offer.', 'Let’s take a look at some examples of how you can apply this discount to your upcomingAmazonpurchases, even if you don’t need anything from Amazon right at the moment.', 'With airlines having regular delays and cancellations over the last year, placing an Apple AirTag on your luggage can be a great way to track the location of your belongings.', 'An Apple AirTag 4 Pack is currently priced at $78.99 before taxes and shipping, but if you’re targeted for the 30% off American Express offer, that’ll bring the pack down to $55.30, or around $13.83 per AirTag before tax.', 'Or, if you’re hoping to pick up a set of new Apple AirPods Pro 2, right now Amazon is selling them for $189.99.', 'But you can knock that down even further to as low as $159.99 before taxes if you’re targeted for this offer.', 'Even if you aren’t eligible for any of these particular Amex promotions, offers like this typically resurface many times throughout the year, so keep on checking back.', 'Amazon often runs similar promotions for other credit cards, so check out our guides to discounts for Chase and Discover card holders to see what’s available.', 'You might also find that even if you aren’t eligible now for one of these offers, you could magically become targeted in a few weeks, so keep on checking the link to see if you’ve been granted access.', 'Amazon has been eagerly offers some lucrative promotions over the last few years, sokeep your credit card accounts linked to your Amazon account, and if you’re targeted for any of these offers, make sure you use them before they expire at the end of the year.', 'Also, make sure you read our guide to thebest credit cards for Amazonto be sure you’re using the right card when you buy at Amazon.', 'Looking for a travel credit card?', 'Find out which cardsCNN Underscored Moneychose as thebest travel credit cardscurrently available.']",0.2766683229921542,Most American Express card members typically think of their Amex points as opportunities for amazing travel opportunities.,That’s not the best value you can get for Amex points.,-0.0578339397907257,"Amazon has been eagerly offers some lucrative promotions over the last few years, sokeep your credit card accounts linked to your Amazon account, and if you’re targeted for any of these offers, make sure you use them before they expire at the end of the year.",But you can knock that down even further to as low as $159.99 before taxes if you’re targeted for this offer.,2024-05-20 YouTube blocks Hong Kong protest anthem after court order,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/15/media/youtube-glory-to-hong-kong-intl-hnk/index.html," Updated 11:13 PM EDT, Wed May 15, 2024 ","YouTube has blocked access to a popular protest song in Hong Kong, a week after a court in the city granted a government request to ban the anthem. In a statement on Wednesday, YouTube said 32 web links playing “Glory to Hong Kong” have been geoblocked and are now unavailable in the semi autonomous Chinese city following a court order. Attempts to access the videos, which include instrumental and sign language versions of the song, from Hong Kong yielded messages such as “This content is not available on this country domain due to a court order” or “This video isn’t available anymore.” “We are disappointed by the Court’s decision but are complying with its removal order by blocking access to the listed videos for viewers in Hong Kong. We’ll continue to consider our options for an appeal, to promote access to information,” a YouTube spokesperson said in an emailed reply to CNN. Google (GOOGL), which owns Youtube, told CNN in an emailed reply last week that “it is reviewing the court’s judgment.” CNN has also reached out to Meta (META) — which owns Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram — and Spotify (SPOT). “Glory to Hong Kong” was composed by a musician under a pseudonym in August 2019 and became the unofficial anthem of pro-democracy protests. The authorities have long taken issue with what they say is the song’s separatist undertones. The ballad contains lyrics that reference the phrase “liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times,” a protest slogan that was already outlawed in 2020. The Hong Kong government and courts had said the phrase had secessionist and subversive connotations. Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin told reporters Wednesday that “preventing anyone from using and disseminating relevant songs with the intention of inciting secession and insulting the national anthem is a legitimate and necessary measure” for Hong Kong “to fulfil its responsibilities of safeguarding national security and the dignity of the national anthem.” The Asia Internet Coalition, which counts Spotify and Meta as members, said it is “assessing the implications of the decision,” including how the injunction will be implemented, to determine its impact on businesses. “We believe that a free and open internet is fundamental to the city’s ambitions to become an international technology and innovation hub,” said Jeff Paine, the group’s managing director. A Hong Kong government spokesperson said “freedoms are not absolute”. Over the past two years, “Glory to Hong Kong” has been mistakenly played at international sporting events involving Hong Kong teams, instead of China’s national anthem “March of the Volunteers.” Pro-Beijing politicians and officials, including the city’s justice minister, Paul Lam, have mostly blamed Google’s algorithm for letting the song come up at the top of searches. Last June, Hong Kong’s Department of Justice filed a court injunction to seek a ban on the broadcasting or distribution of the song. The injunction was initially rejected but was overturned last week following an appeal. Hong Kong was promised key freedoms and autonomy to run its own affairs after it was handed over from British rule to China in 1997. As a result, it had flourished as a bastion of free speech and creative expression within authoritarian China. But a crackdown on dissent in the aftermath of the democracy protests has since transformed the city, especially after a sweeping national security law was imposed by Beijing in 2020. This year, a second local security bill, known as Article 23, was passed targets seditious acts, espionage and foreign interference. China and Hong Kong’s leaders say the laws are needed as part of their drive to “restore stability” following huge and often violent democracy protests in 2019 and argue their legislation is similar to other national security laws around the world.",CNN,15/05/2024,"['YouTube has blocked access to a popular protest song in Hong Kong, a week after a court in the city granted a government request to ban the anthem.', 'In a statement on Wednesday, YouTube said 32 web links playing “Glory to Hong Kong” have been geoblocked and are now unavailable in the semi autonomous Chinese city following a court order.', 'Attempts to access the videos, which include instrumental and sign language versions of the song, from Hong Kong yielded messages such as “This content is not available on this country domain due to a court order” or “This video isn’t available anymore.”', '“We are disappointed by the Court’s decision but are complying with its removal order by blocking access to the listed videos for viewers in Hong Kong.', 'We’ll continue to consider our options for an appeal, to promote access to information,” a YouTube spokesperson said in an emailed reply to CNN.', 'Google (GOOGL), which owns Youtube, told CNN in an emailed reply last week that “it is reviewing the court’s judgment.”', 'CNN has also reached out to Meta (META) — which ownsFacebook, WhatsApp and Instagram— and Spotify (SPOT).', '“Glory to Hong Kong” was composed by a musician under a pseudonym in August 2019 and became the unofficial anthem of pro-democracy protests.', 'The authorities have long taken issue with what they say is the song’s separatist undertones.', 'The ballad contains lyrics that reference the phrase “liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times,” a protest slogan that was alreadyoutlawedin 2020.', 'The Hong Kong government and courts had said the phrase had secessionist and subversive connotations.', 'Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin told reporters Wednesday that “preventing anyone from using and disseminating relevant songs with the intention of inciting secession and insulting the national anthem is a legitimate and necessary measure” for Hong Kong “to fulfil its responsibilities of safeguarding national security and the dignity of the national anthem.”', 'The Asia Internet Coalition, which counts Spotify and Meta as members, said it is “assessing the implications of the decision,” including how the injunction will be implemented, to determine its impact on businesses.', '“We believe that a free and open internet is fundamental to the city’s ambitions to become an international technology and innovation hub,” said Jeff Paine, the group’s managing director.', 'A Hong Kong government spokesperson said “freedoms are not absolute”.', 'Over the past two years, “Glory to Hong Kong” has been mistakenly played at international sporting events involving Hong Kong teams, instead of China’s national anthem “March of the Volunteers.”', 'Pro-Beijing politicians and officials, including the city’s justice minister, Paul Lam, have mostly blamed Google’s algorithm for letting the song come up at the top of searches.', 'Last June, Hong Kong’s Department of Justice filed a court injunction to seek a ban on the broadcasting or distribution of the song.', 'The injunction was initially rejected but was overturned last week following an appeal.', 'Hong Kong was promised key freedoms and autonomy to run its own affairs after it was handed over from British rule to China in 1997.As a result, it had flourished as a bastion of free speech and creative expression within authoritarian China.', 'But a crackdown on dissent in the aftermath of the democracy protests has since transformed the city, especially after asweeping national security lawwas imposed by Beijing in 2020.', 'This year, a second local security bill, known as Article 23, was passed targets seditious acts, espionage and foreign interference.', 'China and Hong Kong’s leaders say the laws are needed as part of their drive to “restore stability” following huge and often violent democracy protests in 2019 and argue their legislation is similar to other national security laws around the world.']",0.1061580634831549,"Hong Kong was promised key freedoms and autonomy to run its own affairs after it was handed over from British rule to China in 1997.As a result, it had flourished as a bastion of free speech and creative expression within authoritarian China.",“We are disappointed by the Court’s decision but are complying with its removal order by blocking access to the listed videos for viewers in Hong Kong.,-0.1042998909950256,"Hong Kong was promised key freedoms and autonomy to run its own affairs after it was handed over from British rule to China in 1997.As a result, it had flourished as a bastion of free speech and creative expression within authoritarian China.","YouTube has blocked access to a popular protest song in Hong Kong, a week after a court in the city granted a government request to ban the anthem.",2024-05-20 OpenAI puts flirty ChatGPT voice that sounds like ScarJo in ‘Her’ on hold,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/tech/openai-pausing-flirty-chatgpt-voice/index.html," Updated 10:04 AM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","OpenAI says it’s hitting the pause button on a synthetic voice released with an update to ChatGPT that prompted comparisons with a fictional voice assistant portrayed in the quasi-dystopian film “Her” by actor Scarlett Johansson. The retreat by OpenAI follows a backlash to the artificial voice, known as Sky, which critics described as being overly familiar with users and sounded as if it had emerged from a male developer’s fantasy. It was widely mocked for its flirtatious tone. “We’ve heard questions about how we chose the voices in ChatGPT, especially Sky,” OpenAI said in a post on X Monday. “We are working to pause the use of Sky while we address them.” The voice in question is not derived from Johansson’s, the company said in a blog post Sunday, but instead “belongs to a different professional actress using her own natural speaking voice.” OpenAI said that with each of its AI voices, it tried to create “an approachable voice that inspires trust,” one that contains a “rich tone” and is “natural and easy to listen to.” The ChatGPT voice mode that used the Sky voice had not yet been widely released, but videos from the product announcement and teasers of OpenAI employees speaking with it went viral online last week. Some who heard Sky derided it as perhaps too easy to listen to. Last week, the controversy inspired a segment on The Daily Show in which senior correspondent Desi Lydic described Sky as a “horny robot baby voice.” “This is clearly programmed to feed dudes’ egos,” Lydic said. “You can really tell that a man built this tech.” Even OpenAI CEO Sam Altman appeared to acknowledge the widespread parallels users were drawing with Johansson when he posted to X on the day of the product’s announcement: “her.” “Her” is the title of the 2013 film in which Johansson portrays an artificially intelligent voice assistant with whom the protagonist, played by Joaquin Phoenix, falls in love, only to be left heartbroken when the AI admits she is also in love with hundreds of other users and later becomes inaccessible altogether. The criticism surrounding Sky highlights broader societal concerns about the potential biases of a technology designed by tech companies largely led or funded by White men. The announcement came after OpenAI leaders were forced to defend their safety practices over the weekend after a departing employee called the company’s priorities into question. Jan Leike, who formerly led a team focused on long-term AI safety but left OpenAI last week along with Co-Founder and Chief Scientist Ilya Sutskever, posted a thread on X Friday claiming that “over the past years, safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products” at OpenAI. He also raised concerns that the company was not devoting enough resources to preparing for a possible future “artificial general intelligence” (AGI) that could be smarter than humans. Altman quickly responded saying he appreciated Leike’s commitment to “safety culture” and added: “He’s right we have a lot more to do; we are committed to doing it.” The company also confirmed to CNN that in recent weeks it had begun to dissolve the team Leike led, and instead was integrating members of the team across its various research groups. A spokesperson for the company said that structure would help OpenAI better achieve its safety objectives. OpenAI President Greg Brockman responded in a longer post on Saturday, which was signed with both his name and Altman’s, laying out the company’s approach to long-term AI safety. “We have raised awareness of the risks and opportunities of AGI so that the world can better prepare for it,” Brockman said. “We’ve repeatedly demonstrated the incredible possibilities from scaling up deep learning and analyzed their implications; called for international governance of AGI before such calls were popular; and helped pioneer the science of assessing AI systems for catastrophic risks.” He added that as AI becomes smarter and more integrated with humans’ daily lives, the company is focused on having in place “a very tight feedback loop, rigorous testing, careful consideration at every step, world-class security, and harmony of safety and capabilities.”",CNN,20/05/2024,"['OpenAI says it’s hitting the pause button on a synthetic voice released with an update to ChatGPT that prompted comparisons with a fictional voice assistant portrayed in the quasi-dystopian film “Her” by actor Scarlett Johansson.', 'The retreat by OpenAI follows a backlash to the artificial voice, known as Sky, which critics described as being overly familiar with users and sounded as if it had emerged from a male developer’s fantasy.', 'It was widely mocked for its flirtatious tone.', '“We’ve heard questions about how we chose the voices in ChatGPT, especially Sky,” OpenAI said in a post on X Monday. “', 'We are working to pause the use of Sky while we address them.”', 'The voice in question is not derived from Johansson’s, the company said in a blog post Sunday, but instead “belongs to a different professional actress using her own natural speaking voice.”', 'OpenAI said that with each of its AI voices, it tried to create “an approachable voice that inspires trust,” one that contains a “rich tone” and is “natural and easy to listen to.”', 'The ChatGPT voice mode that used the Sky voice had not yet been widely released, but videos from the product announcement and teasers of OpenAI employees speaking with it went viral online last week.', 'Some who heard Sky derided it as perhaps too easy to listen to.', 'Last week, the controversy inspired a segment on The Daily Show in which senior correspondent Desi Lydic described Sky as a “horny robot baby voice.”', '“This is clearly programmed to feed dudes’ egos,” Lydic said. “', 'You can really tell that a man built this tech.”', 'Even OpenAI CEO Sam Altman appeared to acknowledge the widespread parallels users were drawing with Johansson when he posted to X on the day of the product’s announcement: “her.”', '“Her” is the title of the 2013 film in which Johansson portrays an artificially intelligent voice assistant with whom the protagonist, played by Joaquin Phoenix, falls in love, only to be left heartbroken when the AI admits she is also in love with hundreds of other users and later becomes inaccessible altogether.', 'The criticism surrounding Sky highlights broader societal concerns about the potential biases of a technology designed by tech companies largely led or funded by White men.', 'The announcement came after OpenAI leaders were forced to defend their safety practices over the weekend after a departing employee called the company’s priorities into question.', 'Jan Leike, who formerly led a team focused on long-term AI safety but left OpenAI last week along with Co-Founder and Chief Scientist Ilya Sutskever, posted a thread on X Friday claiming that “over the past years, safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products” at OpenAI.', 'He also raised concerns that the company was not devoting enough resources to preparing for a possible future “artificial general intelligence” (AGI) that could be smarter than humans.', 'Altman quickly responded saying he appreciated Leike’s commitment to “safety culture” and added: “He’s right we have a lot more to do; we are committed to doing it.”', 'The company also confirmed to CNN that in recent weeks it had begun to dissolve the team Leike led, and instead was integrating members of the team across its various research groups.', 'A spokesperson for the company said that structure would help OpenAI better achieve its safety objectives.', 'OpenAI President Greg Brockman responded in a longer post on Saturday, which was signed with both his name and Altman’s, laying out the company’s approach to long-term AI safety.', '“We have raised awareness of the risks and opportunities of AGI so that the world can better prepare for it,” Brockman said. “', 'We’ve repeatedly demonstrated the incredible possibilities from scaling up deep learning and analyzed their implications; called for international governance of AGI before such calls were popular; and helped pioneer the science of assessing AI systems for catastrophic risks.”', 'He added that as AI becomes smarter and more integrated with humans’ daily lives, the company is focused on having in place “a very tight feedback loop, rigorous testing, careful consideration at every step, world-class security, and harmony of safety and capabilities.”']",0.2768255557888683,"OpenAI said that with each of its AI voices, it tried to create “an approachable voice that inspires trust,” one that contains a “rich tone” and is “natural and easy to listen to.”",The criticism surrounding Sky highlights broader societal concerns about the potential biases of a technology designed by tech companies largely led or funded by White men.,-0.042128329927271,A spokesperson for the company said that structure would help OpenAI better achieve its safety objectives.,"Jan Leike, who formerly led a team focused on long-term AI safety but left OpenAI last week along with Co-Founder and Chief Scientist Ilya Sutskever, posted a thread on X Friday claiming that “over the past years, safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products” at OpenAI.",2024-05-20 Judge’s stern rebuke of Elon Musk’s X gives researchers fresh hope,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/tech/judges-stern-rebuke-of-elon-musks-x-gives-researchers-fresh-hope/index.html," Published 1:17 PM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","A federal judge’s decision this week reprimanding Elon Musk’s X will have reverberating effects on efforts to hold influential online platforms accountable, legal experts and advocacy groups say. On Monday, District Judge Charles Breyer dismissed and excoriated a lawsuit by X against online watchdog group Center for Countering Digital Hate as an attempt to silence the non-profit group for sounding alarms about hate speech on the platform. Breyer wrote in Monday’s order that the lawsuit was “unabashedly” about “punishing” reports written by CCDH, which X had accused of campaigning to drive away its advertisers. Breyer held that the reports were “unquestionably” protected by the group’s free speech rights. Now, that decision could embolden other research groups and Musk critics who have faced legal threats from the billionaire. The CCDH case — in the US District Court for the Northern District of California — has been widely viewed as a bellwether for research and accountability on X, where Musk has restored the accounts of previously banned White supremacists and spreaders of misinformation and where Musk himself has amplified various conspiracy theories. And CCDH is not the only organization that has faced attacks by self-proclaimed “free speech absolutist” Musk after criticizing or raising concerns about his platform. “This is an important decision that sees Elon Musk’s lawsuit for what it is — an effort to punish his critics for constitutionally protected speech and to deter researchers from studying his platform,” said Alex Abdo, litigation director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, which had filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case arguing that private companies should not be allowed to use breach of contract claims to punish criticism. “Society needs reliable and ethical research into social media platforms, and often that research relies on being able to study publicly available posts,” Abdo said. X said it plans to appeal Breyer’s decision. In his first year as owner of X, formerly known as Twitter, Musk threatened legal action against the Anti-Defamation League for defamation, as well as against Microsoft and Meta for allegedly improper data and trade secret access, respectively. None of those threats ever amounted to real lawsuits. He did, however, sue the progressive media watchdog Media Matters over its analysis highlighting antisemitic and pro-Nazi content on X, alleging that the group’s testing methodology was not representative of how real users experience the site and that the report was designed to drive away advertisers. Legal experts have described that case as “weak” on the merits and as a “bogus” attempt to chill criticism of X. This week’s court decision may be only a temporary setback in Musk’s wider plan to stifle criticism, said Media Matters CEO Angelo Carusone. Musk’s new playbook, Carusone said, enlists the help of sympathetic Republican attorneys general to investigate independent reporting organizations and tie them up in legal proceedings. The states of Texas and Missouri each announced probes into Media Matters following X’s lawsuit against the group, to which Musk responded, “Great!” As recently as Monday, Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey filed a petition in state court seeking to compel Media Matters’ cooperation with his investigation. The filing came a week after he appeared with Musk in a live event on X — which Carusone said shows how Musk hopes to deputize the power of government to silence his critics. “They have every reason to do it,” Carusone said of the AGs’ investigations. “They get the political benefits, they get the attention. There doesn’t seem to be any cost to them yet. And if they are successful at developing this new playbook, this new terrain, legally, then it’s going to pave the way for them to just use this tool and tactic over and over and over again.” A representative for X did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Carusone’s claims. Researchers from non-profits and academic institutions have had a harder time studying X since Musk’s takeover in 2022. Academics need large samples of posts, shares, likes and other data to study social media trends in mis- and disinformation, public health, elections and other key topics. But one of Musk’s first changes at X was to put access to platform data behind a steep paywall. Researchers and civil society groups said the new subscription fees — costing up to $2.5 million a year — were “outrageously expensive” and made it impossible to do their work, reducing transparency of a critical platform. The change may have forced some researchers to rely more heavily on first-person observational data to draw conclusions about user behavior on X. Groups like CCDH have also used automated “scraping” of publicly viewable content from X rather than paying the company for data directly, a tactic that helped give rise to X’s initial lawsuit. Efforts by X and other social media companies to limit research transparency makes them less accountable to the public at best and, at worst, could mask malicious behavior, said David Karpf, an associate professor in the School of Media and Public Affairs at George Washington University. “We need independent research to have any real measure of what’s going on at X/Twitter. Musk is only ever going to release data that makes his company look good,” Karpf said. “These platforms are too big and too vital to the spread of information to be left unmonitored.” “This is an election year,” Karpf added, “and the platforms are taking steps to make it harder to monitor how their services are used for malignant ends.” Free Press, another media accountability organization that has been critical of Musk’s leadership of X and which called for advertisers to pause their spending on the platform shortly after his takeover, also celebrated Breyer’s ruling as potentially removing at least one hurdle that watchdog organizations face. “The guardrails for democracy are hanging by a thread and we have dwindling insights into platform practices as researchers face lawsuits, congressional subpoenas and other scare tactics,” said Nora Benavidez, senior counsel and director of digital rights at Free Press. Ultimately, Benavidez called the ruling “a reminder that platform accountability is essential and will inevitably prevail when up against bullies like Musk who try to silence us.”",CNN,26/03/2024,"['A federal judge’s decision this week reprimanding Elon Musk’s X will have reverberating effects on efforts to hold influential online platforms accountable, legal experts and advocacy groups say.', 'On Monday, District Judge Charles Breyer dismissed and excoriated a lawsuit by X against online watchdog group Center for Countering Digital Hate as an attempt to silence the non-profit group for sounding alarms about hate speech on the platform.', 'Breyer wrote in Monday’s order that the lawsuit was “unabashedly” about “punishing” reports written by CCDH, which X had accused of campaigning to drive away its advertisers.', 'Breyer held that the reports were “unquestionably” protected by the group’s free speech rights.', 'Now, that decision could embolden other research groups and Musk critics who have faced legal threats from the billionaire.', 'The CCDH case — in the US District Court for the Northern District of California —has been widely viewed as a bellwether for research and accountability on X, where Musk has restored the accounts of previously banned White supremacists and spreaders of misinformation and where Musk himself has amplified various conspiracy theories.', 'And CCDH is not the only organization that has faced attacks by self-proclaimed “free speech absolutist” Musk after criticizing or raising concerns about his platform.', '“This is an important decision that sees Elon Musk’s lawsuit for what it is — an effort to punish his critics for constitutionally protected speech and to deter researchers from studying his platform,” said Alex Abdo, litigation director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, which had filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case arguing that private companies should not be allowed to use breach of contract claims to punish criticism.', '“Society needs reliable and ethical research into social media platforms, and often that research relies on being able to study publicly available posts,” Abdo said.', 'X said it plans to appeal Breyer’s decision.', 'In his first year as owner of X, formerly known as Twitter, Musk threatened legal action against the Anti-Defamation League for defamation, as well as against Microsoft and Meta for allegedly improper data and trade secret access, respectively.', 'None of those threats ever amounted to real lawsuits.', 'He did, however, sue the progressive media watchdog Media Matters over itsanalysishighlighting antisemitic and pro-Nazi content on X, alleging that the group’s testing methodology was not representative of how real users experience the site and that the report was designed to drive away advertisers.', 'Legal experts have described that case as “weak” on the merits and as a “bogus” attempt to chill criticism of X. This week’s court decision may be only a temporary setback in Musk’s wider plan to stifle criticism, said Media Matters CEO Angelo Carusone.', 'Musk’s new playbook, Carusone said, enlists the help of sympathetic Republican attorneys general to investigate independent reporting organizations and tie them up in legal proceedings.', 'The states of Texas and Missouri each announced probes into Media Matters following X’s lawsuit against the group, to which Musk responded, “Great!”', 'As recently as Monday, Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey filed a petition in state court seeking to compel Media Matters’ cooperation with his investigation.', 'The filing came a week after he appeared with Musk in a live event on X — which Carusone said shows how Musk hopes to deputize the power of government to silence his critics.', '“They have every reason to do it,” Carusone said of the AGs’ investigations. “', 'They get the political benefits, they get the attention.', 'There doesn’t seem to be any cost to them yet.', 'And if they are successful at developing this new playbook, this new terrain, legally, then it’s going to pave the way for them to just use this tool and tactic over and over and over again.”', 'A representative for X did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Carusone’s claims.', 'Researchers from non-profits and academic institutions have had a harder time studying X since Musk’s takeover in 2022.', 'Academics need large samples of posts, shares, likes and other data to study social media trends in mis- and disinformation, public health, elections and other key topics.', 'But one of Musk’s first changes at X was to put access to platform data behind a steep paywall.', 'Researchers and civil society groups said the new subscription fees — costing up to $2.5 million a year —were “outrageously expensive” and made it impossible to do their work, reducing transparency of a critical platform.', 'The change may have forced some researchers to rely more heavily on first-person observational data to draw conclusions about user behavior on X. Groups like CCDH have also used automated “scraping” of publicly viewable content from X rather than paying the company for data directly, a tactic that helped give rise to X’s initial lawsuit.', 'Efforts by X and other social media companies to limit research transparency makes them less accountable to the public at best and, at worst, could mask malicious behavior, said David Karpf, an associate professor in the School of Media and Public Affairs at George Washington University.', '“We need independent research to have any real measure of what’s going on at X/Twitter.', 'Musk is only ever going to release data that makes his company look good,” Karpf said. “', 'These platforms are too big and too vital to the spread of information to be left unmonitored.”', '“This is an election year,” Karpf added, “and the platforms are taking steps to make it harder to monitor how their services are used for malignant ends.”', 'Free Press, another media accountability organization that has been critical of Musk’s leadership of X and which called for advertisers to pause their spending on the platform shortly after his takeover, also celebrated Breyer’s ruling as potentially removing at least one hurdle that watchdog organizations face.', '“The guardrails for democracy are hanging by a thread and we have dwindling insights into platform practices as researchers face lawsuits, congressional subpoenas and other scare tactics,” said Nora Benavidez, senior counsel and director of digital rights at Free Press.', 'Ultimately, Benavidez called the ruling “a reminder that platform accountability is essential and will inevitably prevail when up against bullies like Musk who try to silence us.”']",0.0427064270235155,"Musk’s new playbook, Carusone said, enlists the help of sympathetic Republican attorneys general to investigate independent reporting organizations and tie them up in legal proceedings.","“This is an important decision that sees Elon Musk’s lawsuit for what it is — an effort to punish his critics for constitutionally protected speech and to deter researchers from studying his platform,” said Alex Abdo, litigation director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, which had filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case arguing that private companies should not be allowed to use breach of contract claims to punish criticism.",-0.3806276832308088,"Free Press, another media accountability organization that has been critical of Musk’s leadership of X and which called for advertisers to pause their spending on the platform shortly after his takeover, also celebrated Breyer’s ruling as potentially removing at least one hurdle that watchdog organizations face.","Researchers and civil society groups said the new subscription fees — costing up to $2.5 million a year —were “outrageously expensive” and made it impossible to do their work, reducing transparency of a critical platform.",2024-05-20 Digital humans: the relatable face of artificial intelligence?,https://edition.cnn.com/business/digital-humans-ai-dj-dex-spc/index.html," Published 5:33 AM EDT, Tue March 19, 2024 ","Scrolling through the Instagram account of DJ and aspiring model Dex you’ll see her wearing new outfits, performing at shows around the world and chatting to her thousands of followers about her hobbies. However, it’s clear that there is something different about Dex; she’s an entirely virtual “digital human,” designed by a startup in the UK. For her performances, Dex is displayed on a video screen or as a holographic projection, with her mixes created by humans. She is animated using Unreal Engine — a 3D modeling software widely used in video games — combined with motion-capture. Generative artificial intelligence allows her to remember information and respond to questions, using a voice also generated by AI. “She’s probably one of the only digital humans in the performance space that you can have a conversation and interact with,” says Denise Harris, CCO of startup Sum Vivas. “You can ask her anything. She is a genius about music.” Last month, Dex performed at Digital Fashion Weeks in New York, Paris and Milan, and she has modeled outfits by Prada and Louis Vuitton at digital fashion events. For Liverpool-based Sum Vivas she’s a “showpiece” for more practical applications. The company is now developing digital humans that can “listen” to people’s questions and converse in real time. “Shellie” can provide product information as an avatar on company websites, while “Arif” is set to direct passengers and answer questions as a multilingual concierge on screens at airports. According to CEO and founder Rob Sims, digital humans can help bridge the gap between AI technology and people. “What we’ve found is when people start working with and conversing with a digital human, they very quickly suspend disbelief,” Sims tells CNN. “It becomes natural.” Since OpenAI’s ChatGPT was launched in November 2022, considerable hype has surrounded the potential of generative AI — artificial intelligence powered by huge datasets of information, capable of generating text outputs in a conversational way. Record levels of investment into generative AI have followed, with over $21 billion poured into the industry during the first nine months of last year, according to data insights company Pitchbook. In March 2023, Google launched Bard (recently renamed Gemini) and around the same time Anthropic released its AI assistant Claude. As generative AI chatbots become increasingly ubiquitous, Sum Vivas is one of several companies looking to make them more human. US and New Zealand-based UneeQ has developed animated conversational “digital humans” that can be used as virtual sales reps and customer service agents on company websites, and this month it debuted Sama 2.0, an animated cabin crew member that answers questions on Qatar Airways’ website and app. Microsoft recently announced that users of its Azure software would be able to create lifelike avatars capable of turning text prompts into animated speech. However, there are widespread concerns about the impact AI could have on the job market. “When we rely on automated tools, what skills are we losing in the process?” asks Jennifer Ding, senior researcher at the Alan Turing Institute, the UK’s national institute for data science and artificial intelligence. “In some ways, we think of AI as something that’s helping us or augmenting our work,” she says. “However, alongside, this fear of replacement is bubbling up more and more.” Harris, however, points to new opportunities within digital human design and development. “Every scenario that we found, we’re creating jobs and working in harmony with people rather than taking away jobs,” she says. “Digital humans, first and foremost, should work with other human colleagues,” adds Sims. “We’ll move into a stage where digital humans will start to become just another member of the team, with added benefits for that team, and obviously the customers they serve.”",CNN,19/03/2024,"['Scrolling through the Instagram account of DJ and aspiring model Dex you’ll see her wearing new outfits, performing at shows around the world and chatting to her thousands of followers about her hobbies.', 'However, it’s clear that there is something different about Dex; she’s an entirely virtual “digital human,” designed by a startup in the UK.', 'For her performances, Dex is displayed on a video screen or as a holographic projection, with her mixes created by humans.', 'She is animated using Unreal Engine — a 3D modeling software widely used in video games — combined with motion-capture.', 'Generative artificial intelligence allows her to remember information and respond to questions, using a voice also generated by AI.', '“She’s probably one of the only digital humans in the performance space that you can have a conversation and interact with,” says Denise Harris, CCO of startup Sum Vivas. “', 'You can ask her anything.', 'She is a genius about music.”', 'Last month, Dex performed at Digital Fashion Weeks in New York, Paris and Milan, and she has modeled outfits by Prada and Louis Vuitton at digital fashion events.', 'For Liverpool-based Sum Vivas she’s a “showpiece” for more practical applications.', 'The company is now developing digital humans that can “listen” to people’s questions and converse in real time. “', 'Shellie” can provide product information as an avatar on company websites, while “Arif” is set to direct passengers and answer questions as a multilingual concierge on screens at airports.', 'According to CEO and founder Rob Sims, digital humans can help bridge the gap between AI technology and people. “', 'What we’ve found is when people start working with and conversing with a digital human, they very quickly suspend disbelief,” Sims tells CNN. “', 'It becomes natural.”', 'Since OpenAI’s ChatGPT was launched in November 2022, considerable hype has surrounded the potential of generative AI — artificial intelligence powered by huge datasets of information, capable of generating text outputs in a conversational way.', 'Record levels of investment into generative AI have followed, with over $21 billion poured into the industry during the first nine months of last year, according to data insights company Pitchbook.', 'In March 2023, Google launched Bard (recently renamed Gemini) and around the same time Anthropic released its AI assistant Claude.', 'As generative AI chatbots become increasingly ubiquitous, Sum Vivas is one of several companies looking to make them more human.', 'US and New Zealand-based UneeQ has developed animated conversational “digital humans” that can be used as virtual sales reps and customer service agents on company websites, and this month it debuted Sama 2.0, an animated cabin crew member that answers questions on Qatar Airways’ website and app.', 'Microsoft recently announced that users of its Azure software would be able to create lifelike avatars capable of turning text prompts into animated speech.', 'However, there are widespread concerns about the impact AI could have on the job market.', '“When we rely on automated tools, what skills are we losing in the process?”', 'asks Jennifer Ding, senior researcher at the Alan Turing Institute, the UK’s national institute for data science and artificial intelligence. “', 'In some ways, we think of AI as something that’s helping us or augmenting our work,” she says. “', 'However, alongside, this fear of replacement is bubbling up more and more.”', 'Harris, however, points to new opportunities within digital human design and development. “', 'Every scenario that we found, we’re creating jobs and working in harmony with people rather than taking away jobs,” she says.', '“Digital humans, first and foremost, should work with other human colleagues,” adds Sims. “', 'We’ll move into a stage where digital humans will start to become just another member of the team, with added benefits for that team, and obviously the customers they serve.”']",0.1214444180579973,"Since OpenAI’s ChatGPT was launched in November 2022, considerable hype has surrounded the potential of generative AI — artificial intelligence powered by huge datasets of information, capable of generating text outputs in a conversational way.","However, alongside, this fear of replacement is bubbling up more and more.”",0.2107271328568458,"Harris, however, points to new opportunities within digital human design and development. “","However, there are widespread concerns about the impact AI could have on the job market.",2024-05-20 How Red Lobster’s misguided endless shrimp promotion drove it into bankruptcy,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/business/what-went-wrong-at-red-lobster/index.html," Updated 3:04 PM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","Last summer, Red Lobster made $20 endless shrimp a permanent menu item. Endless shrimp was a successful annual limited-time offer for Red Lobster for 20 years. But Red Lobster’s latest major shareholder, Thai Union, a Bangkok-based canned seafood company, saw the promotion as a way to sell off the mountains of shrimp it was catching and turned it into an everyday item. (Thai Union became Red Lobster’s largest investor in 2020.) The change cost Red Lobster $11 million. Red Lobster filed for bankruptcy Sunday, and the bankruptcy filing sheds new light on Thai Union’s role in the endless shrimp mishap. Red Lobster said it is investigating the circumstances of that promotion, which Red Lobster management opposed. Under a CEO appointed at the direction of Thai Union, Red Lobster eliminated two of its breaded shrimp suppliers, leaving Thai Union with an exclusive deal to provide shrimp for the chain, the filing said. That led to higher costs, and it did not comply with the company’s typical decision-making process for picking suppliers based on projected demand, according to the chain’s filing. “This decision created both operational and financial issues for [Red Lobster]… saddling the company with burdensome supply obligations” to Thai Union, Red Lobster said in the filing. Thai Union did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment. Endless shrimp alone didn’t doom Red Lobster. The American poster child for seafood was dragged down by a range of factors, say former leaders at the chain and restaurant analysts — including handoffs between a mix of investors and corporate parents and Thai Union’s mismanagement. “Certain operational decisions by former management have harmed [Red Lobster’s] financial situation in recent years,” Red Lobster said in its bankruptcy filing. The explosive growth and popularity of fast-casual chains like Chipotle and quick-service chains like Chick-fil-A over the past two decades also squeezed Red Lobster. And years of underinvestment in Red Lobster’s marketing, food quality, service and restaurant upgrades hurt the chain’s ability to add Millennials to its core Baby Boomer customer base. “Red Lobster was the foundation of casual dining. They had a position of power and prominence and revolutionized how American consumers eat seafood,” said Alex Susskind, a professor of food and beverage management at Cornell University, in a previous interview with CNN. But the company didn’t build on that foundation, Susskind said. “Red Lobster had incredible popularity among Baby Boomers. They didn’t bring in a newer generation.” When the first Red Lobster opened in 1968 in Lakeland, Florida, an hour south of Orlando, casual dining was in its infancy. The brand was started by southern restaurateurs Bill Darden and Charley Woodsby. Darden owned several Howard Johnson’s restaurants, one of the first casual dining concepts. “Our motto was informal and family prices,” Woodsby later said. They saw an opportunity to bring seafood to landlocked people at more affordable prices than fine-dining restaurants. “In most of middle America, you couldn’t get decent seafood. Red Lobster brought it to the masses,” said Jonathan Maze, the editor in chief at Restaurant Business Magazine, a trade publication. “Red Lobster was part of this casual dining revolution.” Just two years into Darden and Woodsby’s venture, General Mills acquired the brand. General Mills owned brands like Wheaties, Cheerios and Betty Crocker, and the company wanted to enter the restaurant industry with Red Lobster’s five no-frills restaurants. By the early 1970s, with General Mills’ advertising muscle behind it, Red Lobster opened restaurants across the South. Red Lobster rose quickly and was the first casual dining chain to advertise on network television, according to a Harvard Business School study. Red Lobster also developed the first national seafood distribution system in the 1970s. “Many diners preferred their seafood fried in those days, and Red Lobster’s hush puppies could be considered an early ‘signature item,’” Joe Lee, the first general manager at Red Lobster and later its president, said in a journal article. “Families were welcomed with high chairs and a 59-cent child’s plate.” By 1978, Red Lobster had 236 restaurants and $291 million in sales. It had 372 restaurants and $834 million in sales in 1985. In 1995, General Mills spun off its restaurant division into a new company, Darden Restaurants, named for Red Lobster founder Bill Darden. The company initially included the legacy Red Lobster chain and Olive Garden, an upstart chain General Mills had started in 1982. But Red Lobster fell behind its sister brand Olive Garden under Darden. By 2008, Olive Garden’s sales had eclipsed Red Lobster’s. Darden also acquired fast-growing chains such as Longhorn Steakhouse, Capital Grille and Yard House. “Darden stopped investing in Red Lobster. Things slowly deteriorated,” Les Foreman, a director of operations and divisional vice president at Red Lobster from 2002 to 2022, told CNN. Red Lobster’s sales began declining and Darden prioritized investments in its other brands. Darden soon faced pressure from activist investors pushing the company to split in two. Darden responded to activist pressure by announcing plans in 2013 to sell Red Lobster, separating the chain from the rest of its business. The following year, Darden sold Red Lobster to Golden Gate Capital, a private equity firm, for $2.1 billion. To help fund the deal, Red Lobster spun off its real estate assets in a transaction known as a sale leaseback agreement. Red Lobster had long owned its own real estate but would now be paying rent to lease its restaurants. Sale leasebacks are very common in the restaurant industry, but the arrangement wound up hurting Red Lobster because it became stuck with leases it no longer could afford to pay. “That produced cost pressures on Red Lobster that they’ve never had before,” said analyst John Gordon. “It became a problem.” At the same time, fast-casual and quick-service restaurants grew with lower prices, thousands of new drive-thru locations and online delivery. These chains pressured the casual dining sector. Casual dining has slipped from 36% of total restaurant industry sales in 2013 to 31% in 2023, according to Technomic, a restaurant research firm. Red Lobster’s controlling shareholder Thai Union also hurt the brand, say former employees and analysts. Thai Union was a top supplier of shrimp to Red Lobster for more than 20 years. In 2016, Thai Union took a $575 million minority stake in the brand. In 2020, Thai Union deepened its financial interest in Red Lobster. Thai Union saw an opportunity to grow its business and also become a bigger supplier to Red Lobster. It also tested squeezing Red Lobster’s waitstaff to the breaking point to save on labor costs, switching from waiters covering three tables to 10. Red Lobster executives began to run for the doors under Thai Union’s management, resulting in a huge amount of C-suite churn. In 2021 and 2022, Red Lobster brought on a new CEO, chief marketing officer, chief financial officer and chief information officer. All left the company within two years. Then came the all-you-can-eat shrimp mishap last year. “We were expecting an increase of 20% in customer traffic, but the actual number was up to 40%,” Thai Union CEO Thiraphong Chansiri said in November. Two months later, Thai Union said it would divest from Red Lobster and take a $530 million loss on its investment. The company blamed the pandemic, as well as “sustained industry headwinds, higher interest rates and rising material and labor costs.” “I’m going to stop eating lobster,” Chansiri said this year.",CNN,20/05/2024,"['Last summer, Red Lobster made $20 endless shrimp a permanent menu item.', 'Endless shrimp was a successful annual limited-time offer for Red Lobster for 20 years.', 'But Red Lobster’s latest major shareholder, Thai Union, a Bangkok-based canned seafood company, saw the promotion as a way to sell off the mountains of shrimp it was catching and turned it into an everyday item. (', 'Thai Union became Red Lobster’s largest investor in 2020.)', 'The change cost Red Lobster $11 million.', 'Red Lobster filed for bankruptcy Sunday, and the bankruptcy filing sheds new light on Thai Union’s role in the endless shrimp mishap.', 'Red Lobster said it is investigating the circumstances of that promotion, which Red Lobster management opposed.', 'Under a CEO appointed at the direction of Thai Union, Red Lobster eliminated two of its breaded shrimp suppliers, leaving Thai Union with an exclusive deal to provide shrimp for the chain, the filing said.', 'That led to higher costs, and it did not comply with the company’s typical decision-making process for picking suppliers based on projected demand, according to the chain’s filing.', '“This decision created both operational and financial issues for [Red Lobster]… saddling the company with burdensome supply obligations” to Thai Union, Red Lobster said in the filing.', 'Thai Union did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.', 'Endless shrimp alone didn’t doom Red Lobster.', 'The American poster child for seafood was dragged down by a range of factors, say former leaders at the chain and restaurant analysts — including handoffs between a mix of investors and corporate parents and Thai Union’s mismanagement.', '“Certain operational decisions by former management have harmed [Red Lobster’s] financial situation in recent years,” Red Lobster said in its bankruptcy filing.', 'The explosive growth and popularity of fast-casual chains like Chipotle and quick-service chains like Chick-fil-A over the past two decades also squeezed Red Lobster.', 'And years of underinvestment in Red Lobster’s marketing, food quality, service and restaurant upgrades hurt the chain’s ability to add Millennials to its core Baby Boomer customer base.', '“Red Lobster was the foundation of casual dining.', 'They had a position of power and prominence and revolutionized how American consumers eat seafood,” said Alex Susskind, a professor of food and beverage management at Cornell University, in a previous interview with CNN.', 'But the company didn’t build on that foundation, Susskind said. “', 'Red Lobster had incredible popularity among Baby Boomers.', 'They didn’t bring in a newer generation.”', 'When the first Red Lobster opened in 1968 in Lakeland, Florida, an hour south of Orlando, casual dining was in its infancy.', 'The brand was started by southern restaurateurs Bill Darden and Charley Woodsby.', 'Darden owned several Howard Johnson’s restaurants, one of the first casual dining concepts.', '“Our motto was informal and family prices,” Woodsbylater said.', 'They saw an opportunity to bring seafood to landlocked people at more affordable prices than fine-dining restaurants.', '“In most of middle America, you couldn’t get decent seafood.', 'Red Lobster brought it to the masses,” said Jonathan Maze, the editor in chief at Restaurant Business Magazine, a trade publication. “', 'Red Lobster was part of this casual dining revolution.”', 'Just two years into Darden and Woodsby’s venture, General Mills acquired the brand.', 'General Mills owned brands like Wheaties, Cheerios and Betty Crocker, and the company wanted to enter the restaurant industry with Red Lobster’s five no-frills restaurants.', 'By the early 1970s, with General Mills’ advertising muscle behind it, Red Lobster opened restaurants across the South.', 'Red Lobster rose quickly and was the first casual dining chain to advertise on network television, according to a Harvard Business Schoolstudy.', 'Red Lobster also developed the first national seafood distribution system in the 1970s.', '“Many diners preferred their seafood fried in those days, and Red Lobster’s hush puppies could be considered an early ‘signature item,’” Joe Lee, the first general manager at Red Lobster and later its president, said in a journalarticle. “', 'Families were welcomed with high chairs and a 59-cent child’s plate.”', 'By 1978, Red Lobster had 236 restaurants and $291 million in sales.', 'It had 372 restaurants and $834 million in sales in 1985.', 'In 1995, General Mills spun off its restaurant division into a new company, Darden Restaurants, named for Red Lobster founder Bill Darden.', 'The company initially included the legacy Red Lobster chain and Olive Garden, an upstart chain General Mills had started in 1982.', 'But Red Lobster fell behind its sister brand Olive Garden under Darden.', 'By 2008, Olive Garden’s sales had eclipsed Red Lobster’s.', 'Darden also acquired fast-growing chains such as Longhorn Steakhouse, Capital Grille and Yard House.', '“Darden stopped investing in Red Lobster.', 'Things slowly deteriorated,” Les Foreman, a director of operations and divisional vice president at Red Lobster from 2002 to 2022, told CNN.', 'Red Lobster’s sales began declining and Darden prioritized investments in its other brands.', 'Darden soon faced pressure from activist investors pushing the company to split in two.', 'Darden responded to activist pressure by announcing plans in 2013 tosell Red Lobster, separating the chain from the rest of its business.', 'The following year, Dardensold Red Lobsterto Golden Gate Capital, a private equity firm, for $2.1 billion.', 'To help fund the deal, Red Lobster spun off its real estate assets in a transaction known as a sale leaseback agreement.', 'Red Lobster had long owned its own real estate but would now be paying rent to lease its restaurants.', 'Sale leasebacks are very common in the restaurant industry, but the arrangement wound up hurting Red Lobster because it became stuck with leases it no longer could afford to pay.', '“That produced cost pressures on Red Lobster that they’ve never had before,” said analyst John Gordon. “', 'It became a problem.”', 'At the same time, fast-casual and quick-service restaurants grew with lower prices, thousands of new drive-thru locations and online delivery.', 'These chains pressured the casual dining sector.', 'Casual dining has slipped from 36% of total restaurant industry sales in 2013 to 31% in 2023, according to Technomic, a restaurant research firm.', 'Red Lobster’s controlling shareholder Thai Union also hurt the brand, say former employees and analysts.', 'Thai Union was a top supplier of shrimp to Red Lobster for more than 20 years.', 'In 2016, Thai Union took a $575 million minority stake in the brand.', 'In 2020, Thai Union deepened its financial interest in Red Lobster.', 'Thai Union saw an opportunity to grow its business and also become a bigger supplier to Red Lobster.', 'It also tested squeezing Red Lobster’s waitstaff to the breaking point to save on labor costs, switching from waiters covering three tables to 10.', 'Red Lobster executives began to run for the doors under Thai Union’s management, resulting in a huge amount of C-suite churn.', 'In 2021 and 2022, Red Lobster brought on a new CEO, chief marketing officer, chief financial officer and chief information officer.', 'All left the company within two years.', 'Then came the all-you-can-eat shrimp mishap last year.', '“We were expecting an increase of 20% in customer traffic, but the actual number was up to 40%,” Thai Union CEO Thiraphong Chansiri said in November.', 'Two months later, Thai Union said it would divest from Red Lobster and take a $530 million loss on its investment.', 'The company blamed the pandemic, as well as “sustained industry headwinds, higher interest rates and rising material and labor costs.”', '“I’m going to stop eating lobster,” Chansiri said this year.']",0.0336547402723664,The explosive growth and popularity of fast-casual chains like Chipotle and quick-service chains like Chick-fil-A over the past two decades also squeezed Red Lobster.,"Sale leasebacks are very common in the restaurant industry, but the arrangement wound up hurting Red Lobster because it became stuck with leases it no longer could afford to pay.",-0.1549297715055531,"“We were expecting an increase of 20% in customer traffic, but the actual number was up to 40%,” Thai Union CEO Thiraphong Chansiri said in November.","“Certain operational decisions by former management have harmed [Red Lobster’s] financial situation in recent years,” Red Lobster said in its bankruptcy filing.",2024-05-20 Justice Department says Boeing breached 2021 agreement that shielded it from criminal charges over 737 Max crashes,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/14/justice-department-says-boeing-breached-2021-agreement-that-shielded-it-from-criminal-charges-over-737-max-crashes.html,2024-05-14T23:43:03+0000,"In this articleBoeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected it from criminal charges tied to the fatal 737 Max crashes, opening the company up to potential U.S. prosecution, the Department of Justice said Tuesday.Federal prosecutors said in a court filing in Texas they are still determining ""how it will proceed in this matter"" and that Boeing will have 30 days to respond.The airplane manufacturer broke the agreement by ""failing to design, implement, and enforce a compliance and ethics program to prevent and detect violations of the U.S. fraud laws throughout its operations,"" the DOJ said.Boeing denied those claims.""We believe that we have honored the terms of that agreement, and look forward to the opportunity to respond to the Department on this issue,"" Boeing said.In January 2021, Boeing agreed to pay $2.5 billion to settle a conspiracy charge with the Justice Department. After a roughly two-year probe, the DOJ accused the company of concealing information about its Max plane that had been involved in two crashes that claimed the lives of all 346 people on board.Boeing had admitted that two of its 737 Max technical pilots ""deceived"" the Federal Aviation Administration about the capabilities of a flight-control system on the planes that was later implicated in the two crashes, the Justice Department said at the time.""This is a positive first step, and for the families, a long time coming. But we need to see further action from DOJ to hold Boeing accountable, and plan to use our meeting on May 31 to explain in more detail what we believe would be a satisfactory remedy to Boeing's ongoing criminal conduct,"" Paul Cassell, a lawyer for crash victims' families said in a statement on Tuesday.The plane-maker has been under heightened federal scrutiny after a door panel blew out midair from a 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines on Jan. 5. A preliminary investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board said bolts that hold in the door plug, which fills an optional emergency exit, didn't appear to be in place.The near-tragedy has created a fresh crisis for Boeing, just as it was trying to stabilize its production and improve its reputation after the 2018 and 2019 crashes.",CNBC,14/05/2024,"['In this articleBoeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected it from criminal charges tied to the fatal 737 Max crashes, opening the company up to potential U.S. prosecution, the Department of Justice said Tuesday.', 'Federal prosecutors said in a court filing in Texas they are still determining ""how it will proceed in this matter"" and that Boeing will have 30 days to respond.', 'The airplane manufacturer broke the agreement by ""failing to design, implement, and enforce a compliance and ethics program to prevent and detect violations of the U.S. fraud laws throughout its operations,"" the DOJ said.', 'Boeing denied those claims.', '""We believe that we have honored the terms of that agreement, and look forward to the opportunity to respond to the Department on this issue,"" Boeing said.', 'In January 2021, Boeing agreed to pay $2.5 billion to settle a conspiracy charge with the Justice Department.', 'After a roughly two-year probe, the DOJ accused the company of concealing information about its Max plane that had been involved in two crashes that claimed the lives of all 346 people on board.', 'Boeing had admitted that two of its 737 Max technical pilots ""deceived"" the Federal Aviation Administration about the capabilities of a flight-control system on the planes that was later implicated in the two crashes, the Justice Department said at the time.', '""This is a positive first step, and for the families, a long time coming.', 'But we need to see further action from DOJ to hold Boeing accountable, and plan to use our meeting on May 31 to explain in more detail what we believe would be a satisfactory remedy to Boeing\'s ongoing criminal conduct,"" Paul Cassell, a lawyer for crash victims\' families said in a statement on Tuesday.', 'The plane-maker has been under heightened federal scrutiny after a door panel blew out midair from a 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines on Jan. 5.', ""A preliminary investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board said bolts that hold in the door plug, which fills an optional emergency exit, didn't appear to be in place."", 'The near-tragedy has created a fresh crisis for Boeing, just as it was trying to stabilize its production and improve its reputation after the 2018 and 2019 crashes.']",-0.1461397537016413,"""We believe that we have honored the terms of that agreement, and look forward to the opportunity to respond to the Department on this issue,"" Boeing said.","The airplane manufacturer broke the agreement by ""failing to design, implement, and enforce a compliance and ethics program to prevent and detect violations of the U.S. fraud laws throughout its operations,"" the DOJ said.",0.1171628104315863,"""This is a positive first step, and for the families, a long time coming.","The near-tragedy has created a fresh crisis for Boeing, just as it was trying to stabilize its production and improve its reputation after the 2018 and 2019 crashes.",2024-05-20 Under Armour was a real threat to Nike. Now it’s fighting to stay relevant,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/18/business/under-armour-kevin-plank-shoes/index.html," Published 10:00 AM EDT, Sat May 18, 2024 ","It was once hyped as a worthy rival to Nike. But at present, Under Armour, founded by a 23-year-old former college athlete, is struggling to “just do it.” Instead, the brand that’s championed on the basketball court by Stephen Curry and on the golf course by Jordan Spieth, is now struggling — badly — to find its footing in an increasingly competitive and crowded sportwear marketplace for regular folks, where younger shoppers are more googly-eyed over newer entrants like Hoka and On running shoes. Under Armour’s annual sales have been sluggish at best for the past several years, while its stock has plunged 88% from its all-time high in 2015. Industry experts said the company is mired in an unpleasant mix of problems, which include an identity crisis, several management controversies, ignoring evolving market trends to its detriment, and a rotating carousel of CEOs in quick succession. One of them is Kevin Plank, its founder, who is back at the helm for a second time as CEO after being replaced in 2019. Similar to Starbucks founder Howard Schultz’s past returns to Starbucks and Disney chief Bob Iger’s recent return as CEO, Plank aims to right the ship at Under Armour. “When Under Armour was growing at 20% plus numbers, people saw it as a legitimate competitor to Nike,” said David Swartz, senior equity analyst with research firm Morningstar, in an interview with CNN. “It was like On or Hoka but 10 years ago. It was the upstart athletic brand that was making real inroads against Nike, the dominant name in the industry. People saw it as a company that actually could break through and take market share from Nike among the hardcore athletes,” Swartz said. “That actually did happen for a while, but then that didn’t last.” Plank launched Under Armour in 1996 to be what the name suggests — a protective layer of clothing worn by competitive athletes sweating it out in the heat of the game. The first product was a fitted T-shirt called “The Shorty,” made from moisture-wicking fabric for elite athletes to wear under their uniforms to keep them dry. Its iconic Under Armour intertwined “U” and “A” logo was strategically placed on the neckline, to keep it conspicuous. The T-shirt eventually launched the brand to the masses after it quickly gained fandom among the ranks of professional athletes. The startup’s fast track to success led to Under Armour going public in 2005. It’s early slogan: “Protect This House.” By 2010, the business had crossed $1 billion in sales. Five years later, sales surpassed $4 billion. But then the momentum started to wane. The past eight years for Under Armour have been a struggle that doesn’t appear to be abating. The company on Thursday announced a restructuring of its business as its North America sales in its most recent quarter tumbled 10%. Looking ahead, the company cast a dour forecast for its current fiscal year, expecting sales to drop 15% to 17%. Layoffs will be part of the effort to right the ship but executives did not specify how many employees will lose their jobs. Under Armour also announced a $500 million share buyback, a move to reward shareholders. Plank told analysts during the earnings call on Thursday that he will shepherd a reset of the business that centers on selling fewer but more innovative products to meet the needs of athletes, significantly accelerating product development, refocusing on its men’s apparel category and reducing discounts of its products. “We are simply doing too much stuff. There are too many products, too many initiatives. To reconstitute this brand, we must be highly focused and prioritize what needs to get done so that our teams know exactly what to do with a clear definition of success for them,” Plank said. It can’t be ignored that management issues, too, have plagued the business for years, Swartz said. “The company has essentially had five CEOs in the past five years, if you count Kevin Plank twice,” said Swartz. Plank was announced as CEO — again — in March, ending the very brief year-long tenure of Stephanie Linnartz. Plank conceded during the analysts call Thursday that frequent C-suite turnover had become a serious impediment to success. “With several CEOs and heads of product, marketing in North America over the past half-decade, ongoing turnover of critical leadership has been central to our inability to stay agile and decisive,” he said. The period from 2016 onward is when “things really started to fall apart” at Under Armour, Swartz said. A huge issue arose when an important channel of distribution for the brand went bankrupt and closed stores. A bulk of Under Armour products are sold through sporting goods retailers and department stores, including Macy’s and Kohl’s, and online. “When Sports Authority went bankrupt in 2016 it really hurt Under Armour. It was a major customer of the brand, as is Dick’s Sporting Goods,” Schwartz said. In 2020, UCLA sued Under Armour for ending a $280 million sponsorship deal. The suit alleged that Under Armour was struggling before Covid-19 and that it used the pandemic as a reason to get out of the deal. The 15-year sponsorship deal, signed in 2016, was the largest in the history of college sports at the time. In exchange for the $280 million, UCLA’s student athletes and personnel would wear and use Under Armour (UA)-supplied products exclusively. The company reached a settlement with UCLA. The following year, Under Armour paid $9 million to settle a multi-year investigation with the US Securities and Exchange Commission into its past accounting practices, according to Footwear News. Outside of other bad press for Plank, competitors were gaining ground on Under Armour, whose high-performance sportwear offerings weren’t best suited for the Lululemon-driven athleisure trend that had emerged and then dominated the way consumers dressed through the pandemic. “Under Armour has failed to latch upon streetwear, or sports style that catapulted On or Hoka or Merrell,” said Zak Stambor, senior analyst, retail and ecommerce, with market research firm eMarketer, in an interview with CNN. “It needs to figure out what is next. If it can’t do that, then it needs to quickly latch upon what another brand has identified as the next big thing.” Stambor questioned Plank’s decision to pull back from discounts at a time when consumers are hyper focused on value. “It carries the risk of decreasing demand particularly when you don’t have a must-have product,” he said. Stambor said this decision also stands in stark contrast to a recent move that rival Adidas has made to roll out cheaper versions of their must-have shoes. Despite it’s significant challenges, Stambor said Under Armour can remain relevant in the market. “It is a very large company with huge revenue. It’s not as though the brand has fully diminished in standing. It’s a bit stuck,” he said. “Under Armour needs to identify what it is that consumers want and lean heavily in that direction. It hasn’t fully shown an ability to do so over the past few years,” he said. One area that’s going strong is the brand’s long-term celebrity-brand partnerships, said Eric Smallwood, president of Apex Marketing Group, a sports and entertainment firm that evaluates sponsorships and advertising campaigns. “Under Armour’s relationship with the ‘The Rock’, Dwayne Johnson, has been pretty effective. They’ve expanded to the United Football League, which is the football league that Johnson co-owns,” Smallwood said. “Their uniforms are Under Armour.” Golf is another area where the brand is making inroads while the Stephen Curry partnership has kept the brand visible in the basketball world, Smallwood said. The basketball superstar Curry, arguably the best shooter in history, famously signed with Under Armour instead of Nike in 2013. Meanwhile, the brand’s other major NBA star, Joel Embiid, quit Under Armour in 2023 a few months after he was named the league’s most valuable player. Embiid signed a shoe deal with Skechers last month. Under Armour reportedly bid hard for a shoe deal with WNBA phenom Caitlin Clark, who many expect will sign with Nike. “The bottomline for Under Armour is for the brand to be clear about its identity,” he said. “Are they a shoe company? Are they an apparel company? At one point everyone else copied their mositure-wicking undershirt. Then maybe they had an identity crisis. It’s going to come down to deciding if they want to evolve into a lifestyle brand or stay in performance-based products.”",CNN,18/05/2024,"['It was once hyped as a worthy rival to Nike.', 'But at present, Under Armour, founded by a 23-year-old former college athlete, is struggling to “just do it.”', 'Instead, the brand that’s championed on the basketball court by Stephen Curry and on the golf course by Jordan Spieth, is now struggling — badly — to find its footing in an increasingly competitive and crowded sportwear marketplace for regular folks, where younger shoppers are more googly-eyed over newer entrants like Hoka and On running shoes.', 'Under Armour’s annual sales have been sluggish at best for the past several years, while its stock has plunged 88% from its all-time high in 2015.', 'Industry experts said the company is mired in an unpleasant mix of problems, which include an identity crisis, several management controversies, ignoring evolving market trends to its detriment, and a rotating carousel of CEOs in quick succession.', 'One of them is Kevin Plank, its founder, who is back at the helm for a second time as CEO after being replaced in 2019.', 'Similar to Starbucks founder Howard Schultz’s past returns to Starbucks and Disney chief Bob Iger’s recent return as CEO, Plank aims to right the ship at Under Armour.', '“When Under Armour was growing at 20% plus numbers, people saw it as a legitimate competitor to Nike,” said David Swartz, senior equity analyst with research firm Morningstar, in an interview with CNN.', '“It was like On or Hoka but 10 years ago.', 'It was the upstart athletic brand that was making real inroads against Nike, the dominant name in the industry.', 'People saw it as a company that actually could break through and take market share from Nike among the hardcore athletes,” Swartz said. “', 'That actually did happen for a while, but then that didn’t last.”', 'Plank launched Under Armour in 1996 to be what the name suggests — a protective layer of clothing worn by competitive athletes sweating it out in the heat of the game.', 'The first product was a fitted T-shirt called “The Shorty,” made from moisture-wicking fabric for elite athletes to wear under their uniforms to keep them dry.', 'Its iconic Under Armour intertwined “U” and “A” logo was strategically placed on the neckline, to keep it conspicuous.', 'The T-shirt eventually launched the brand to the masses after it quickly gained fandom among the ranks of professional athletes.', 'The startup’s fast track to success led to Under Armour going public in 2005.', 'It’s early slogan: “Protect This House.”', 'By 2010, the business had crossed $1 billion in sales.', 'Five years later, sales surpassed $4 billion.', 'But then the momentum started to wane.', 'The past eight years for Under Armour have been a struggle that doesn’t appear to be abating.', 'The company on Thursday announced a restructuring of its business as its North America sales in its most recent quarter tumbled 10%.', 'Looking ahead, the company cast a dour forecast for its current fiscal year, expecting sales to drop 15% to 17%.', 'Layoffs will be part of the effort to right the ship but executives did not specify how many employees will lose their jobs.', 'Under Armour also announced a $500 million share buyback, a move to reward shareholders.', 'Plank told analysts during the earnings call on Thursday that he will shepherd a reset of the business that centers on selling fewer but more innovative products to meet the needs of athletes, significantly accelerating product development, refocusing on its men’s apparel category and reducing discounts of its products.', '“We are simply doing too much stuff.', 'There are too many products, too many initiatives.', 'To reconstitute this brand, we must be highly focused and prioritize what needs to get done so that our teams know exactly what to do with a clear definition of success for them,” Plank said.', 'It can’t be ignored that management issues, too, have plagued the business for years, Swartz said.', '“The company has essentially had five CEOs in the past five years, if you count Kevin Plank twice,” said Swartz.', 'Plank was announced as CEO — again — in March, ending the very brief year-long tenure of Stephanie Linnartz.', 'Plank conceded during the analysts call Thursday that frequent C-suite turnover had become a serious impediment to success.', '“With several CEOs and heads of product, marketing in North America over the past half-decade, ongoing turnover of critical leadership has been central to our inability to stay agile and decisive,” he said.', 'The period from 2016 onward is when “things really started to fall apart” at Under Armour, Swartz said.', 'A huge issue arose when an important channel of distribution for the brand went bankrupt and closed stores.', 'A bulk of Under Armour products are sold through sporting goods retailers and department stores, including Macy’s and Kohl’s, and online.', '“When Sports Authority went bankrupt in 2016 it really hurt Under Armour.', 'It was a major customer of the brand, as is Dick’s Sporting Goods,” Schwartz said.', 'In 2020, UCLA sued Under Armour for ending a $280 million sponsorship deal.', 'The suit alleged that Under Armour was struggling before Covid-19 and that it used the pandemic as a reason to get out of the deal.', 'The 15-year sponsorship deal, signed in 2016, was thelargest in the historyof college sports at the time.', 'In exchange for the $280 million, UCLA’s student athletes and personnel would wear and use Under Armour(UA)-supplied products exclusively.', 'The company reached a settlement with UCLA.', 'The following year, Under Armour paid $9 million to settle a multi-year investigation with the US Securities and Exchange Commission into its past accounting practices, according to Footwear News.', 'Outside of other bad press for Plank, competitors were gaining ground on Under Armour, whose high-performance sportwear offerings weren’t best suited for the Lululemon-driven athleisure trend that had emerged and then dominated the way consumers dressed through the pandemic.', '“Under Armour has failed to latch upon streetwear, or sports style that catapulted On or Hoka or Merrell,” said Zak Stambor, senior analyst, retail and ecommerce, with market research firm eMarketer, in an interview with CNN. “', 'It needs to figure out what is next.', 'If it can’t do that, then it needs to quickly latch upon what another brand has identified as the next big thing.”', 'Stambor questioned Plank’s decision to pull back from discounts at a time when consumers are hyper focused on value.', '“It carries the risk of decreasing demand particularly when you don’t have a must-have product,” he said.', 'Stambor said this decision also stands in stark contrast to a recent move that rival Adidas has made to roll out cheaper versions of their must-have shoes.', 'Despite it’s significant challenges, Stambor said Under Armour can remain relevant in the market. “', 'It is a very large company with huge revenue.', 'It’s not as though the brand has fully diminished in standing.', 'It’s a bit stuck,” he said.', '“Under Armour needs to identify what it is that consumers want and lean heavily in that direction.', 'It hasn’t fully shown an ability to do so over the past few years,” he said.', 'One area that’s going strong is the brand’s long-term celebrity-brand partnerships, said Eric Smallwood, president of Apex Marketing Group, a sports and entertainment firm that evaluates sponsorships and advertising campaigns.', '“Under Armour’s relationship with the ‘The Rock’, Dwayne Johnson, has been pretty effective.', 'They’ve expanded to the United Football League, which is the football league that Johnson co-owns,” Smallwood said. “', 'Their uniforms are Under Armour.”', 'Golf is another area where the brand is making inroads while the Stephen Curry partnership has kept the brand visible in the basketball world, Smallwood said.', 'The basketball superstar Curry, arguably the best shooter in history, famously signed with Under Armour instead of Nike in 2013.', 'Meanwhile, the brand’s other major NBA star, Joel Embiid, quit Under Armour in 2023 a few months after he was named the league’s most valuable player.', 'Embiid signed a shoe deal with Skechers last month.', 'Under Armour reportedly bid hard for a shoe deal with WNBA phenom Caitlin Clark, who many expect will sign with Nike.', '“The bottomline for Under Armour is for the brand to be clear about its identity,” he said. “', 'Are they a shoe company?', 'Are they an apparel company?', 'At one point everyone else copied their mositure-wicking undershirt.', 'Then maybe they had an identity crisis.', 'It’s going to come down to deciding if they want to evolve into a lifestyle brand or stay in performance-based products.”']",0.0532210799845875,"To reconstitute this brand, we must be highly focused and prioritize what needs to get done so that our teams know exactly what to do with a clear definition of success for them,” Plank said.","Industry experts said the company is mired in an unpleasant mix of problems, which include an identity crisis, several management controversies, ignoring evolving market trends to its detriment, and a rotating carousel of CEOs in quick succession.",-0.0870118283090137,"One area that’s going strong is the brand’s long-term celebrity-brand partnerships, said Eric Smallwood, president of Apex Marketing Group, a sports and entertainment firm that evaluates sponsorships and advertising campaigns.","Under Armour’s annual sales have been sluggish at best for the past several years, while its stock has plunged 88% from its all-time high in 2015.",2024-05-20 "Boeing supplier Spirit AeroSystems lays off workers, citing lower plane delivery rates",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/spirit-aerosystems-layoffs.html,2024-05-16T20:17:00+0000,"In this articleAerospace supplier Spirit AeroSystems on Thursday said it will lay off some of its workers because of slower delivery rates on commercial aircraft as it struggles with a slowdown at its biggest commercial airplane customer, Boeing.Spirit AeroSystems told staff in a memo, reported earlier by Wichita-based KSN, that it would cut about 400 to 450 hourly employees.""We are committed to implementing this transition in as compassionate a manner as possible,"" Spirit AeroSystems said in a statement.About 12,600 people worked at the Wichita facility as of the end of 2023, according to the company's annual filing.Spirit AeroSystems makes fuselages at the plant for Boeing's bestselling 737 Max plane, deliveries of which have slowed in the wake of a door panel blowout and resulting safety crisis at Boeing.Last week, Spirit AeroSystems said first-quarter Boeing deliveries decreased 31% from the same period in 2023, and said overall deliveries were down 11.3%.It reported a quarterly loss of $616.7 million for the first three months of the year. The company has struggled financially in recent years and was last profitable in 2019. The company is also in talks to be acquired by Boeing, which it spun off from in 2005. About 70% of Spirit AeroSystems' revenue last year came from Boeing, although the company also makes parts for Boeing's rival Airbus.Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun told CNBC in an interview in April 2024 that it is ""more than likely"" that the companies reach a deal during the second quarter.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"['In this articleAerospace supplier Spirit AeroSystems on Thursday said it will lay off some of its workers because of slower delivery rates on commercial aircraft as it struggles with a slowdown at its biggest commercial airplane customer, Boeing.', 'Spirit AeroSystems told staff in a memo, reported earlier by Wichita-based KSN, that it would cut about 400 to 450 hourly employees.', '""We are committed to implementing this transition in as compassionate a manner as possible,"" Spirit AeroSystems said in a statement.', ""About 12,600 people worked at the Wichita facility as of the end of 2023, according to the company's annual filing."", ""Spirit AeroSystems makes fuselages at the plant for Boeing's bestselling 737 Max plane, deliveries of which have slowed in the wake of a door panel blowout and resulting safety crisis at Boeing."", 'Last week, Spirit AeroSystems said first-quarter Boeing deliveries decreased 31% from the same period in 2023, and said overall deliveries were down 11.3%.It reported a quarterly loss of $616.7 million for the first three months of the year.', 'The company has struggled financially in recent years and was last profitable in 2019.The company is also in talks to be acquired by Boeing, which it spun off from in 2005.', ""About 70% of Spirit AeroSystems' revenue last year came from Boeing, although the company also makes parts for Boeing's rival Airbus."", 'Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun told CNBC in an interview in April 2024 that it is ""more than likely"" that the companies reach a deal during the second quarter.']",0.0487687692160598,"""We are committed to implementing this transition in as compassionate a manner as possible,"" Spirit AeroSystems said in a statement.","In this articleAerospace supplier Spirit AeroSystems on Thursday said it will lay off some of its workers because of slower delivery rates on commercial aircraft as it struggles with a slowdown at its biggest commercial airplane customer, Boeing.",-0.9941206216812134,,"Last week, Spirit AeroSystems said first-quarter Boeing deliveries decreased 31% from the same period in 2023, and said overall deliveries were down 11.3%.It reported a quarterly loss of $616.7 million for the first three months of the year.",2024-05-20 "As bad as you may think the economy is now, it’s nowhere near the 1970s",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/16/business/us-economy-stagflation-nightcap/index.html," Published 6:00 AM EDT, Thu May 16, 2024 ","When new gross domestic product figures last month showed US economic growth slowed from recent gangbuster levels, many people diagnosed the economy as having a really ugly sickness: stagflation. Symptoms of stagflation include (but are not limited to), stagnating economic growth combined with rising inflation. So March’s ugly inflation report, which showed an unexpected jump in the pace of price increases, and the lackluster GDP report, made the diagnosis seem like a no-brainer. Even JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said last month the US economy “looks more like the 1970s than we’ve seen before,” and that stagflation is a growing risk. But Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said any positive stagflation tests were false positives. “I don’t see the stag or the ‘flation,” he told reporters at a press conference earlier this month after Fed officials voted to leave interest rates unchanged. “I was around for stagflation. It was 10% unemployment. It was high single-digits inflation and very slow growth,” he added, referring to stagflation in the 1970s after a spike in oil prices during the Arab oil embargo. I, being a Gen Zer, can’t speak to that period firsthand. But I agree with Powell nonetheless — the US economy is not experiencing stagflation. It may, however, be experiencing a different, far less serious condition: slackflation. If you’ve never heard that term before, there’s a good reason — I just coined it myself. Slackflation is a condition that’s bothersome enough that you’d text your mom about it and she’d tell you to go to urgent care. Then, you ignore her advice and either it goes away on its own or it gets a lot worse. To use more economic lingo, slackflation is when inflation is sticky — but not out of control— and there’s slack in the economy (nothing to do with the messaging app that has an incredible collection of emojis). Economic slack, a term I unfortunately cannot take any credit for, broadly describes a situation where the economy isn’t performing as well as it could be. The most widely recognized symptom of economic slack is a rising unemployment rate. That’s happening in the US per the latest jobs report. But it’s not nearly at levels that would be cause for concern — the unemployment rate went up just a tenth of a percentage point in April to 3.9% from 3.8% in March. But that could change in the near future. One potentially worrisome sign is the pace of monthly job gains, which slowed to 175,000 last month from 315,000 in March. But many economists agree with Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee, who referred to April’s gains as “very solid.” On top of that, applications for first-time unemployment benefits rose to the highest level since August last week. But on the inflation front, April Consumer Price Index data released Wednesday showed a tiny bit of improvement, with the pace of both annual and monthly price increases slowing slightly. Month-to-month movements in the nation’s inflation rate aren’t all that meaningful to Fed officials, though. As the adage in finance goes, the trend is your friend. And the trend with inflation is not really friendly right now. After months of big improvements, it’s looking like progress may be stalling in getting to the Fed’s 2% inflation target. But, still, the inflation we’re experiencing now is nothing compared to that seen in the 1970s and 1980s. Diane Swonk, chief economist at KPMG, summed it up nicely to me. Unlike Powell, “the majority of the labor force wasn’t born” when stagflation was rampant in the US economy, and therefore “there is no muscle memory of it in their lifetimes.” At the same time, millennials who dominate the workforce are “unable to achieve a lot of other milestones that are very important to people.” Chief among those, she said, is purchasing a home — which many Americans have delayed indefinitely with record-high home prices and painfully high mortgage rates. “So, no, it’s not the 1970s, but it’s understandable why people are still upset.”",CNN,16/05/2024,"['When new gross domestic product figures last month showed US economic growth slowed from recent gangbuster levels, many people diagnosed the economy as having a really ugly sickness: stagflation.', 'Symptoms of stagflation include (but are not limited to), stagnating economic growth combined with rising inflation.', 'So March’s ugly inflation report, which showed an unexpected jump in the pace of price increases, and the lackluster GDP report, made the diagnosis seem like a no-brainer.', 'Even JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said last month the US economy “looks more like the 1970s than we’ve seen before,” and that stagflation is a growing risk.', 'But Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said any positive stagflation tests were false positives. “', 'I don’t see the stag or the ‘flation,” he told reporters at a press conference earlier this month after Fed officials voted to leave interest rates unchanged.', '“I was around for stagflation.', 'It was 10% unemployment.', 'It was high single-digits inflation and very slow growth,” he added, referring to stagflation in the 1970s after a spike in oil prices during the Arab oil embargo.', 'I, being a Gen Zer, can’t speak to that period firsthand.', 'But I agree with Powell nonetheless — the US economy is not experiencing stagflation.', 'It may, however, be experiencing a different, far less serious condition: slackflation.', 'If you’ve never heard that term before, there’s a good reason — I just coined it myself.', 'Slackflation is a condition that’s bothersome enough that you’d text your mom about it and she’d tell you to go to urgent care.', 'Then, you ignore her advice and either it goes away on its own or it gets a lot worse.', 'To use more economic lingo, slackflation is when inflation is sticky — but not out of control— and there’s slack in the economy (nothing to do with the messaging app that has an incredible collection of emojis).', 'Economic slack, a term I unfortunately cannot take any credit for, broadly describes a situation where the economy isn’t performing as well as it could be.', 'The most widely recognized symptom of economic slack is a rising unemployment rate.', 'That’s happening in the US per the latest jobs report.', 'But it’s not nearly at levels that would be cause for concern — the unemployment rate went up just a tenth of a percentage point in April to 3.9% from 3.8% in March.', 'But that could change in the near future.', 'One potentially worrisome sign is the pace of monthly job gains, which slowed to 175,000 last month from 315,000 in March.', 'But many economists agree with Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee, who referred to April’s gains as “very solid.”', 'On top of that, applications for first-time unemployment benefits rose to the highest level since August last week.', 'But on the inflation front, April Consumer Price Index data released Wednesday showed a tiny bit of improvement, with the pace of both annual and monthly price increases slowing slightly.', 'Month-to-month movements in the nation’s inflation rate aren’t all that meaningful to Fed officials, though.', 'As the adage in finance goes, the trend is your friend.', 'And the trend with inflation is not really friendly right now.', 'After months of big improvements, it’s looking like progress may be stalling in getting to the Fed’s 2% inflation target.', 'But, still, the inflation we’re experiencing now is nothing compared to that seen in the 1970s and 1980s.', 'Diane Swonk, chief economist at KPMG, summed it up nicely to me.', 'Unlike Powell, “the majority of the labor force wasn’t born” when stagflation was rampant in the US economy, and therefore “there is no muscle memory of it in their lifetimes.”', 'At the same time, millennials who dominate the workforce are “unable to achieve a lot of other milestones that are very important to people.”', 'Chief among those, she said, is purchasing a home — which many Americans have delayed indefinitely with record-high home prices and painfully high mortgage rates.', '“So, no, it’s not the 1970s, but it’s understandable why people are still upset.”']",0.0594893127298316,But Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said any positive stagflation tests were false positives. “,"Then, you ignore her advice and either it goes away on its own or it gets a lot worse.",-0.2804331089320935,"On top of that, applications for first-time unemployment benefits rose to the highest level since August last week.","When new gross domestic product figures last month showed US economic growth slowed from recent gangbuster levels, many people diagnosed the economy as having a really ugly sickness: stagflation.",2024-05-20 "Boeing whistleblower died by suicide, police investigation reveals",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/business/boeing-whistleblower-suicide-police-investigation/index.html," Published 9:36 PM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","Boeing whistleblower John Barnett died by suicide, according to a police report released on Friday, bringing to end an investigation of the shocking death of a longtime employee who raised concerns about the airplane manufacturer’s safety and production standards – and who sued the company, claiming Boeing illegally retaliated against him. Barnett, 62, was found dead in a vehicle on March 9 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound in Charleston, South Carolina. Officers had been dispatched to conduct a welfare check on Barnett at a Holiday Inn when he failed to show up to a deposition in his case against Boeing, according to his lawyers and a police incident report. When they arrived, responding officers found Barnett dead in the driver’s seat of a truck in the parking lot. He was holding a handgun. The initial police report also said there was a note in the truck. But Barnett’s lawyers said in a statement following his death that his deposition was nearing an end and he appeared to be in good spirits. “We didn’t see any indication he would take his own life. No one can believe it,” his lawyers, Robert Turkewitz and Brian Knowles, said in a statement on March 12. “The Charleston police need to investigate this fully and accurately and tell the public what they find out.” The Charleston Police Department on Friday concluded their investigation into Barnett’s death, saying the Charleston County Coroner’s Office determined that Barnett had killed himself. The investigation found that Barnett was shot in the head at close range and the weapon was found in his right hand. There was also a notebook found in the front seat of the car that showed signs that “he was going through a period of serious personal distress,” according to a media release about the police investigation. Police shared with CNN an image of a note left in the car, which had multiple disparaging messages directed at Boeing. “As this investigation comes to a close, we should not forget it represents the loss of Mr. Barnett’s life,” police said, “We extend our deepest sympathies to his family during this difficult time and hope they continue to find the strength to persevere in absence.” Boeing could not immediately be reached for comment. In March, the company said it was saddened by Barnett’s death. “Our thoughts are with his family and friends,” the company said. Barnett, a former quality manager who had worked at Boeing for decades, told the New York Times in 2019 that he had discovered unsafe wiring clusters in Boeing’s manufacturing processes that, if severed by nearby metal slivers, could have led to the catastrophic failure of an aircraft. “As a quality manager at Boeing, you’re the last line of defense before a defect makes it out to the flying public,” Barnett told the Times. “And I haven’t seen a plane out of Charleston yet that I’d put my name on saying it’s safe and airworthy.” In a statement sent to the plant’s employees and provided to CNN at the time, Brad Zaback, a site leader at the plant and general manager of the 787 program, said the Times’ report “paints a skewed and inaccurate picture of the program and of our team (at the plant).” Zaback, who said the Times declined an invitation to visit the plant, said “quality is the bedrock of who we are,” adding that the plant delivers “the highest quality airplanes.” Since Barnett’s initial public warnings about Boeing, the company has had several high-profile safety and quality lapses, including the blowout of a door plug on a 737 Max shortly after takeoff in January. That led the US Justice Department to announce this week that Boeing could face criminal prosecution for its history of safety problems.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['Boeing whistleblower John Barnett died by suicide, according to a police report released on Friday, bringing to end an investigation of the shocking death of a longtime employee who raised concerns about the airplane manufacturer’s safety and production standards – and who sued the company, claiming Boeing illegally retaliated against him.', 'Barnett, 62, was found dead in a vehicle on March 9 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound in Charleston, South Carolina.', 'Officers had been dispatched to conduct a welfare check on Barnett at a Holiday Inn when he failed to show up to a deposition in his case against Boeing, according to his lawyers and a police incident report.', 'When they arrived, responding officers found Barnett dead in the driver’s seat ofa truck in the parking lot.', 'He was holding a handgun.', 'The initial police report also said there was a note in the truck.', 'But Barnett’s lawyers said in a statement following his death that his deposition was nearing an end and he appeared to be in good spirits.', '“We didn’t see any indication he would take his own life.', 'No one can believe it,” his lawyers, Robert Turkewitz and Brian Knowles, said in a statement on March 12. “', 'The Charleston police need to investigate this fully and accurately and tell the public what they find out.”', 'The Charleston Police Department on Friday concluded their investigation into Barnett’s death, saying the Charleston County Coroner’s Office determined that Barnett had killed himself.', 'The investigation found that Barnett was shot in the head at close range and the weapon was found in his right hand.', 'There was also a notebook found in the front seat of the car that showed signs that “he was going through a period ofserious personal distress,” according to a media release about the police investigation.', 'Police shared with CNN an image of a note left in the car, which had multiple disparaging messages directed at Boeing.', '“As this investigation comes to a close, we should not forget it represents the loss of Mr. Barnett’s life,” police said, “We extend our deepest sympathies to his family during this difficult time and hope they continue to find the strength to persevere in absence.”', 'Boeing could not immediately be reached for comment.', 'In March, the company said it was saddened by Barnett’s death.', '“Our thoughts are with his family and friends,” the company said.', 'Barnett, a former quality manager who had worked at Boeing for decades, told the New York Times in 2019 that he had discovered unsafe wiring clusters in Boeing’s manufacturing processes that, if severed by nearby metal slivers, could have led to the catastrophic failure of an aircraft.', '“As a quality manager at Boeing, you’re the last line of defense before a defect makes it out to the flying public,” Barnett told the Times. “', 'And I haven’t seen a plane out of Charleston yet that I’d put my name on saying it’s safe and airworthy.”', 'In a statement sent to the plant’s employees and provided to CNN at the time, Brad Zaback, a site leader at the plant and general manager of the 787 program, said the Times’ report “paints a skewed and inaccurate picture of the program and of our team (at the plant).”', 'Zaback, who said the Times declined an invitation to visit the plant, said “quality is the bedrock of who we are,” adding that the plant delivers “the highest quality airplanes.”', 'Since Barnett’s initial public warnings about Boeing, the company has had several high-profile safety and quality lapses, including the blowout of a door plug on a 737 Max shortly after takeoff in January.', 'That led the US Justice Department to announce this week that Boeing could face criminal prosecution for its history of safety problems.']",-0.2033378449861339,"“As this investigation comes to a close, we should not forget it represents the loss of Mr. Barnett’s life,” police said, “We extend our deepest sympathies to his family during this difficult time and hope they continue to find the strength to persevere in absence.”","Boeing whistleblower John Barnett died by suicide, according to a police report released on Friday, bringing to end an investigation of the shocking death of a longtime employee who raised concerns about the airplane manufacturer’s safety and production standards – and who sued the company, claiming Boeing illegally retaliated against him.",-0.5364962716897329,But Barnett’s lawyers said in a statement following his death that his deposition was nearing an end and he appeared to be in good spirits.,"Since Barnett’s initial public warnings about Boeing, the company has had several high-profile safety and quality lapses, including the blowout of a door plug on a 737 Max shortly after takeoff in January.",2024-05-20 Microsoft stock hits all-time high after hiring former OpenAI CEO Sam Altman,https://edition.cnn.com/2023/11/20/investing/microsoft-stock-record-high-altman-openai/index.html," Updated 4:19 PM EST, Mon November 20, 2023 ","Microsoft stock reached a record high on Monday after the company said that Sam Altman, former chief executive of OpenAI, will join the company to head its artificial intelligence innovation leg. Shares of the tech behemoth rose 2.1% to an all-time high close of $377.44 on Monday, beating the previous record of $376.17. That comes after shares of Microsoft fell 1.7% on Friday, when Sam Altman was ousted from his position at OpenAI in a boardroom coup. Microsoft is the artificial intelligence firm’s biggest stakeholder, with a $13 billion investment in the company. Greg Brockman, who co-founded OpenAI and quit after Altman’s firing, is also joining Microsoft. Altman’s hiring ended days of speculation that the former chief executive could return to the firm after his dramatic firing. Emmett Shear, former CEO of Amazon-owned streaming service Twitch, will replace OpenAI chief technology officer Mira Murati as interim chief executive. Microsoft shares are up about 56% for the year. The stock is one of the “Magnificent Seven” that have powered the lion’s share of the market’s returns this year, boosted by Wall Street’s bet that artificial intelligence is the next big thing in tech. Dan Ives, tech analyst at Wedbush Securities, reiterated his $425 price target for Microsoft’s stock following Altman’s and Brockman’s hires. “We view Microsoft now even in a stronger position from an AI perspective with Altman and Brockman” at the company, Ives wrote in a note on Monday. Other members of the “Magnificent Seven” saw a boost on Monday. Nvidia shares gained 2.3% to end the trading session at $504.20 ahead of its earnings due on Tuesday, notching a record-high close for the chipmaker.",CNN,20/11/2023,"['Microsoft stock reached a record high on Monday after the company said that Sam Altman, former chief executive of OpenAI, will join the company to head its artificial intelligence innovation leg.', 'Shares of the tech behemoth rose 2.1% to an all-time high close of $377.44 on Monday, beating the previous record of $376.17.', 'That comes after shares of Microsoft fell 1.7% on Friday, when Sam Altman was ousted from his position at OpenAI in a boardroom coup.', 'Microsoft is the artificial intelligence firm’s biggest stakeholder, with a $13 billion investment in the company.', 'Greg Brockman, who co-founded OpenAI and quit after Altman’s firing, is also joining Microsoft.', 'Altman’s hiring ended days of speculation that the former chief executive could return to the firm after his dramatic firing.', 'Emmett Shear, former CEO of Amazon-owned streaming service Twitch, will replace OpenAI chief technology officer Mira Murati as interim chief executive.', 'Microsoft shares are up about 56% for the year.', 'The stock is one of the “Magnificent Seven” that have powered the lion’s share of the market’s returns this year, boosted by Wall Street’s bet that artificial intelligence is the next big thing in tech.', 'Dan Ives, tech analyst at Wedbush Securities, reiterated his $425 price target for Microsoft’s stock following Altman’s and Brockman’s hires.', '“We view Microsoft now even in a stronger position from an AI perspective with Altman and Brockman” at the company, Ives wrote in a note on Monday.', 'Other members of the “Magnificent Seven” saw a boost on Monday.', 'Nvidia shares gained 2.3% to end the trading session at $504.20 ahead of its earnings due on Tuesday, notching a record-high close for the chipmaker.']",0.3148943375907157,"The stock is one of the “Magnificent Seven” that have powered the lion’s share of the market’s returns this year, boosted by Wall Street’s bet that artificial intelligence is the next big thing in tech.","Greg Brockman, who co-founded OpenAI and quit after Altman’s firing, is also joining Microsoft.",0.7688216765721639,Microsoft shares are up about 56% for the year.,"That comes after shares of Microsoft fell 1.7% on Friday, when Sam Altman was ousted from his position at OpenAI in a boardroom coup.",2024-05-20 Roche says weight loss drug shows promising results in early trial,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/roche-weight-loss-drug-shows-promising-results-in-early-trial.html,2024-05-16T14:03:34+0000,"In this articleRoche on Thursday said its experimental weight loss drug showed promising results in an early-stage trial, boosting the company's bid to compete in the booming market for those treatments.The Swiss company joined a slate of drugmakers racing to develop obesity drugs through its almost $3 billion acquisition of Carmot Therapeutics in December. But its weekly weight loss injection, called CT-388, is still years away from entering the market.The weight loss drug space is dominated by treatments from Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly, and some analysts say the market will be worth $100 billion by the end of the decade.Roche's CT-388 helped patients with obesity lose 18.8% of their weight relative to those who received a placebo, after 24 weeks in the phase one trial, the company said.Roche added that all of the patients who received the drug lost more than 5% of their weight. Meanwhile, 70% of those people lost more than 15% of their weight, and 45% lost more than 20%.The treatment works by mimicking the effect of two gut hormones — GLP-1 and GIP — to suppress a person's appetite, just like Eli Lilly's popular weight loss drug Zepbound and diabetes injection Mounjaro.Scientists have hypothesized that targeting those two hormones could have a meaningful effect on weight loss and blood sugar levels with fewer side effects than drugs that only target GLP-1, such as Novo Nordisk's weight loss treatment Wegovy.Roche's CT-388 is being developed to treat both obesity and diabetes.Roche said it did not observe any new or unexpected side effects in patients taking CT-388. The company noted that mild to moderate gastrointestinal side effects were the most common, consistent with other weight loss and diabetes drugs that work the same way.CT-388 also normalized blood sugar levels in a subgroup of patients with pre-diabetes.Roche said it is testing CT-388 in an additional group of patients with obesity and diabetes over 12 weeks. The company expects data from those patients in the second half of the year.Eli Lilly's Zepbound delivered up to 22% weight loss after 72 weeks, while Novo Nordisk's Wegovy has led to 15% weight loss after 68 weeks.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"[""In this articleRoche on Thursday saidits experimental weight loss drug showed promising results in an early-stage trial, boosting the company's bid to compete in the booming market for those treatments."", 'The Swiss company joined a slate of drugmakers racing to develop obesity drugs through its almost $3 billion acquisition of Carmot Therapeutics in December.', 'But its weekly weight loss injection, called CT-388, is still years away from entering the market.', 'The weight loss drug space is dominated by treatments from Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly, and some analysts say the market will be worth $100 billion by the end of the decade.', ""Roche's CT-388 helped patients with obesity lose 18.8% of their weight relative to those who received a placebo, after 24 weeksin the phase one trial, the company said."", 'Roche added that all of the patients who received the drug lost more than 5% of their weight.', ""Meanwhile, 70% of those people lost more than 15% of their weight, and 45% lost more than 20%.The treatment works by mimicking the effect of two gut hormones — GLP-1 and GIP — to suppress a person's appetite, just like Eli Lilly's popular weight loss drug Zepbound and diabetes injection Mounjaro."", ""Scientists have hypothesized that targeting those two hormones could have a meaningful effect on weight loss and blood sugar levels with fewer side effects than drugs that only target GLP-1, such as Novo Nordisk's weight loss treatment Wegovy."", ""Roche's CT-388 is being developed to treat both obesity and diabetes."", 'Roche said it did not observe any new or unexpected side effects in patients taking CT-388.', 'The company noted that mild to moderate gastrointestinal side effects were the most common, consistent with other weight loss and diabetes drugs that work the same way.', 'CT-388 also normalized blood sugar levels in a subgroup of patients with pre-diabetes.', 'Roche said it is testing CT-388 in an additional group of patients with obesity and diabetes over 12 weeks.', 'The company expects data from those patients in the second half of the year.', ""Eli Lilly's Zepbound delivered up to 22% weight loss after 72 weeks, while Novo Nordisk's Wegovy has led to 15% weight loss after 68 weeks.""]",-0.1197380032998948,"In this articleRoche on Thursday saidits experimental weight loss drug showed promising results in an early-stage trial, boosting the company's bid to compete in the booming market for those treatments.","Eli Lilly's Zepbound delivered up to 22% weight loss after 72 weeks, while Novo Nordisk's Wegovy has led to 15% weight loss after 68 weeks.",0.9663981000582376,"In this articleRoche on Thursday saidits experimental weight loss drug showed promising results in an early-stage trial, boosting the company's bid to compete in the booming market for those treatments.",,2024-05-20 Cuba laments collapse of iconic sugar industry,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-68935247,2024-05-18T00:34:58.000Z,"The men of the Yumuri sugar co-operative in Cuba have worked the cane fields around the city of Cienfuegos since they were old enough to wield a machete. Cutting cane is all Miguel Guzmán has ever known. He comes from a family of farm hands and started the tough, thankless work as a teenager. For hundreds of years, sugar was the mainstay of the Cuban economy. It was not just the island's main export but also the cornerstone of another national industry, rum. Older Cubans remember when the island was essentially built on the backs of families like Mr Guzmán's. Today, though, he readily admits he has never seen the sugar industry as broken and depressed as it is now - not even when the Soviet Union's lucrative sugar quotas dried up after the Cold War. Spiralling inflation, shortages of basic goods and the decades-long US economic embargo have made for a dire economic outlook across the board in Cuba. But things are particularly bleak in the sugar trade. ""There's not enough trucks and the fuel shortages mean sometimes several days pass before we can work,"" says Miguel, waiting in a tiny patch of shade for the Soviet-era lorries to arrive. The lost hours of harvest as men and machinery lie idle have acutely hurt production levels. Last season, Cuba's production fell to just 350,000 tonnes of raw sugar, an all-time low for the country, and well below the 1.3 million tonnes recorded in 2019. Miguel is one of the fastest cutters in his team - or pelotón - recognised by his bosses as among the most efficient in the country. Yet he says he receives no financial incentive for greater production beyond his love of the trade. ""My wages barely buy anything any more,"" he says with no hint of exaggeration over the worsening inflation in the country. ""But what can we do? Cuba needs the sugar."" It certainly does: Cuba now imports sugar to meet domestic demand - once unthinkable, and a far cry from the glory years when Cuban sugar was the envy of the Caribbean and exported around the world. Inside Ciudad Caracas, a 19th-Century sugar mill near Cienfuegos, the air is thick with the overpowering smell of molasses. As obsolete, rusting cogs grind tonnes of sugarcane into pulp and juice, the workers tell me it is one of just two dozen working sugar mills in Cuba. ""That's four more than originally planned for this season, thanks to the hard work and effort of the workers,"" says Dionis Pérez, communications director of the state-run sugar company, Azcuba. ""But the other 29 are at a standstill,"" he acknowledges. ""It's a disaster. Today the sugar industry in Cuba almost doesn't exist,"" says Juan Triana of the Centre for Studies of the Cuban Economy in Havana. The slump in sugar has serious implications for other parts of the Cuban economy, he argues, including on its export earnings from rum. ""We're producing the same quantity of sugar Cuba produced in the middle of the 19th Century."" The problems have undoubtedly been worsened by the ""maximum pressure"" policy brought in by former US President Donald Trump. His administration ratcheted up the trade embargo on the island, a measure later extended by President Joe Biden. But the issues facing Cuban sugar are not solely the fault of the US embargo. Years of chronic mismanagement and underinvestment have also wrecked the once-thriving industry. Today, sugar receives less than 3% of state investment as the Cuban government backs tourism as its main economic motor instead. One man who can still get his hands on enough sugar is Martin Nizarane. Part of a new breed of Cuban private entrepreneurs, his company Clamanta produces yoghurt and ice cream in a factory outside Havana. As Mr Nizarane shows me sacks of sugar imported in bulk from Colombia, he says he hopes to double production soon. The business has been hailed by Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel as a model for the future. That praise from the top, to many, amounts to a paradigm shift. It may still be considered a dirty word by the Cuban state but this is capitalism pure and simple, even if Martin Nizarane displays his revolutionary credentials by adorning his office with photographs of him hugging the late revolutionary leader, Fidel Castro. I put it to him that only people with close ties to the Cuban Communist Party can own a private business as sophisticated as his. He was quick to deny it. ""I am not an employee of the Cuban state. This is a non-state form of production which sells to both other non-state entities and state-owned companies,"" he retorts. ""The state treats me like just another private entrepreneur with no special privileges whatsoever."" Sugar's demise is just one part of Cuba's faltering economy. On 1 March, amid growing inflation, the government imposed a five-fold price increase on subsidised fuel at the petrol pumps. It was a difficult but overdue decision, officials said, arguing the government could no longer afford such high subsidies on fuel. As he queued to fill up his tank on the day the new prices came into force, Manuel Domínguez said he was not convinced. All he knows is that the measure is hurting drivers like him, and that Cubans are suffering now more than he can ever recall. ""There's no relationship between what we earn and the prices we see - whether that's fuel or food in the shops or anything else."" ""There needs to be a correlation between our wages and what things cost because, right now, for the average Cuban, fuel is simply unaffordable."" A few days later, economy and planning minister Alejandro Gil Fernández was arrested for alleged corruption. Some think he has been made a scapegoat for the state of the Cuban economy. Either way, it was an extraordinary - and very public - fall from grace. But most think it will take much more than one ministerial head to roll to pull Cuba from its economic woes. Back in the sugarcane fields of Cienfuegos, the cutters carry out their gruelling work with little optimism. Invariably, when talking about the sugar industry in Cuba, someone will quote the island's famous refrain: ""Without sugar, there's no country."" For Cuban economist Juan Triana that idea is being tested to its limit. A quintessential part of the national identity - part of the island's very DNA - is being eroded before Cubans' eyes. ""For more than maybe 150 years, the industry of the sugarcane was both the main export income and the locomotive for the rest of the economy. That's what we've lost."" ",BBC,18/05/2024,"['The men of the Yumuri sugar co-operative in Cuba have worked the cane fields around the city of Cienfuegos since they were old enough to wield a machete.', 'Cutting cane is all Miguel Guzmán has ever known.', 'He comes from a family of farm hands and started the tough, thankless work as a teenager.', 'For hundreds of years, sugar was the mainstay of the Cuban economy.', ""It was not just the island's main export but also the cornerstone of another national industry, rum."", ""Older Cubans remember when the island was essentially built on the backs of families like Mr Guzmán's."", ""Today, though, he readily admits he has never seen the sugar industry as broken and depressed as it is now - not even when the Soviet Union's lucrative sugar quotas dried up after the Cold War."", 'Spiralling inflation, shortages of basic goods and the decades-long US economic embargo have made for a dire economic outlook across the board in Cuba.', 'But things are particularly bleak in the sugar trade. ""', 'There\'s not enough trucks and the fuel shortages mean sometimes several days pass before we can work,"" says Miguel, waiting in a tiny patch of shade for the Soviet-era lorries to arrive.', 'The lost hours of harvest as men and machinery lie idle have acutely hurt production levels.', ""Last season, Cuba's production fell to just 350,000 tonnes of raw sugar, an all-time low for the country, and well below the 1.3 million tonnes recorded in 2019."", 'Miguel is one of the fastest cutters in his team - or pelotón - recognised by his bosses as among the most efficient in the country.', 'Yet he says he receives no financial incentive for greater production beyond his love of the trade. ""', 'My wages barely buy anything any more,"" he says with no hint of exaggeration over the worsening inflation in the country. ""', 'But what can we do?', 'Cuba needs the sugar.""', 'It certainly does: Cuba now imports sugar to meet domestic demand - once unthinkable, and a far cry from the glory years when Cuban sugar was the envy of the Caribbean and exported around the world.', 'Inside Ciudad Caracas, a 19th-Century sugar mill near Cienfuegos, the air is thick with the overpowering smell of molasses.', 'As obsolete, rusting cogs grind tonnes of sugarcane into pulp and juice, the workers tell me it is one of just two dozen working sugar mills in Cuba. ""', 'That\'s four more than originally planned for this season, thanks to the hard work and effort of the workers,"" says Dionis Pérez, communications director of the state-run sugar company, Azcuba. ""', 'But the other 29 are at a standstill,"" he acknowledges. ""', ""It's a disaster."", 'Today the sugar industry in Cuba almost doesn\'t exist,"" says Juan Triana of the Centre for Studies of the Cuban Economy in Havana.', 'The slump in sugar has serious implications for other parts of the Cuban economy, he argues, including on its export earnings from rum. ""', 'We\'re producing the same quantity of sugar Cuba produced in the middle of the 19th Century.""', 'The problems have undoubtedly been worsened by the ""maximum pressure"" policy brought in by former US President Donald Trump.', 'His administration ratcheted up the trade embargo on the island, a measure later extended by President Joe Biden.', 'But the issues facing Cuban sugar are not solely the fault of the US embargo.', 'Years of chronic mismanagement and underinvestment have also wrecked the once-thriving industry.', 'Today, sugar receives less than 3% of state investment as the Cuban government backs tourism as its main economic motor instead.', 'One man who can still get his hands on enough sugar is Martin Nizarane.', 'Part of a new breed of Cuban private entrepreneurs, his company Clamanta produces yoghurt and ice cream in a factory outside Havana.', 'As Mr Nizarane shows me sacks of sugar imported in bulk from Colombia, he says he hopes to double production soon.', 'The business has been hailed by Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel as a model for the future.', 'That praise from the top, to many, amounts to a paradigm shift.', 'It may still be considered a dirty word by the Cuban state but this is capitalism pure and simple, even if Martin Nizarane displays his revolutionary credentials by adorning his office with photographs of him hugging the late revolutionary leader, Fidel Castro.', 'I put it to him that only people with close ties to the Cuban Communist Party can own a private business as sophisticated as his.', 'He was quick to deny it. ""', 'I am not an employee of the Cuban state.', 'This is a non-state form of production which sells to both other non-state entities and state-owned companies,"" he retorts. ""', 'The state treats me like just another private entrepreneur with no special privileges whatsoever.""', ""Sugar's demise is just one part of Cuba's faltering economy."", 'On 1 March, amid growing inflation, the government imposed a five-fold price increase on subsidised fuel at the petrol pumps.', 'It was a difficult but overdue decision, officials said, arguing the government could no longer afford such high subsidies on fuel.', 'As he queued to fill up his tank on the day the new prices came into force, Manuel Domínguez said he was not convinced.', 'All he knows is that the measure is hurting drivers like him, and that Cubans are suffering now more than he can ever recall. ""', 'There\'s no relationship between what we earn and the prices we see - whether that\'s fuel or food in the shops or anything else."" ""', 'There needs to be a correlation between our wages and what things cost because, right now, for the average Cuban, fuel is simply unaffordable.""', 'A few days later, economy and planning minister Alejandro Gil Fernández was arrested for alleged corruption.', 'Some think he has been made a scapegoat for the state of the Cuban economy.', 'Either way, it was an extraordinary - and very public - fall from grace.', 'But most think it will take much more than one ministerial head to roll to pull Cuba from its economic woes.', 'Back in the sugarcane fields of Cienfuegos, the cutters carry out their gruelling work with little optimism.', 'Invariably, when talking about the sugar industry in Cuba, someone will quote the island\'s famous refrain: ""Without sugar, there\'s no country.""', 'For Cuban economist Juan Triana that idea is being tested to its limit.', 'A quintessential part of the national identity - part of the island\'s very DNA - is being eroded before Cubans\' eyes. ""', 'For more than maybe 150 years, the industry of the sugarcane was both the main export income and the locomotive for the rest of the economy.', 'That\'s what we\'ve lost.""']",-0.0434389662663717,"Yet he says he receives no financial incentive for greater production beyond his love of the trade. ""","Today, though, he readily admits he has never seen the sugar industry as broken and depressed as it is now - not even when the Soviet Union's lucrative sugar quotas dried up after the Cold War.",-0.3151909013589223,"That's four more than originally planned for this season, thanks to the hard work and effort of the workers,"" says Dionis Pérez, communications director of the state-run sugar company, Azcuba. ""","Spiralling inflation, shortages of basic goods and the decades-long US economic embargo have made for a dire economic outlook across the board in Cuba.",2024-05-20 "United Airlines says FAA cleared it to start adding new aircraft, routes after safety review",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/faa-clears-united-airlines-after-safety-review.html,2024-05-16T19:26:52+0000,"In this articleUnited Airlines said the Federal Aviation Administration has cleared it to start adding new aircraft and routes months after the regulator stepped up its scrutiny of the carrier following several safety incidents.""Today, we got some good news: after a careful review and discussion about the proactive safety steps United has taken to date, our FAA Certificate Management Office has allowed us to begin the process of restarting our certification activities, including new aircraft and routes, and we will continue to coordinate closely with the FAA,"" United said in a note to employees Wednesday.United said in March that the FAA had stepped up scrutiny of the airline after a spate of incidents earlier this year. That prevented it from launching new routes, including flights to Faro, Portugal, ahead of the busy summer travel season.United said that it has more work to do, however.""We will continue to see an FAA presence in our operation as they review our work processes, manuals and facilities,"" it said in its employee memo.United would send requests to the FAA to add aircrafts or new routes, though a spokesperson said it has yet to do so. The FAA said later Thursday that it has not yet ""approved any expansion of United Airlines' routes or fleets."" The FAA said its review is ""ongoing and safety will determine the timeline for completing it.""A clearance from the FAA would be welcome news as United and other carriers expect a record peak season this year.Among the safety incidents in recent months, a Japan-bound United Boeing 777 lost a tire shortly after takeoff from San Francisco in February, and a missing panel was discovered on a Boeing 737 after it landed in Oregon in March.While the planes involved older jets, the incidents come amid heightened scrutiny of the aviation industry after a door plug blew out of a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines earlier this year, a near catastrophe that has created a fresh crisis for the manufacturer.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"['In this articleUnited Airlines said the Federal Aviation Administration has cleared it to start adding new aircraft and routes months after the regulator stepped up its scrutiny of the carrier following several safety incidents.', '""Today, we got some good news: after a careful review and discussion about the proactive safety steps United has taken to date, our FAA Certificate Management Office has allowed us to begin the process of restarting our certification activities, including new aircraft and routes, and we will continue to coordinate closely with the FAA,"" United said in a note to employees Wednesday.', 'United said in March that the FAA had stepped up scrutiny of the airline after a spate of incidents earlier this year.', 'That prevented it from launching new routes, including flights to Faro, Portugal, ahead of the busy summer travel season.', 'United said that it has more work to do, however.', '""We will continue to see an FAA presence in our operation as they review our work processes, manuals and facilities,"" it said in its employee memo.', 'United would send requests to the FAA to add aircrafts or new routes, though a spokesperson said it has yet to do so.', 'The FAA said later Thursday that it has not yet ""approved any expansion of UnitedAirlines\' routes or fleets.""', 'The FAA said its review is ""ongoing and safety will determine the timeline for completing it.', '""A clearance from the FAA would be welcome news as United and other carriers expect a record peak season this year.', 'Among the safety incidents in recent months, a Japan-bound United Boeing 777 lost a tire shortly after takeoff from San Francisco in February, and a missing panel was discovered on a Boeing 737 after it landed in Oregon in March.', 'While the planes involved older jets, the incidents come amid heightened scrutiny of the aviation industry after a door plug blew out of a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines earlier this year, a near catastrophe that has created a fresh crisis for the manufacturer.']",0.2539566092965166,"""Today, we got some good news: after a careful review and discussion about the proactive safety steps United has taken to date, our FAA Certificate Management Office has allowed us to begin the process of restarting our certification activities, including new aircraft and routes, and we will continue to coordinate closely with the FAA,"" United said in a note to employees Wednesday.","While the planes involved older jets, the incidents come amid heightened scrutiny of the aviation industry after a door plug blew out of a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines earlier this year, a near catastrophe that has created a fresh crisis for the manufacturer.",0.1512451086725507,"""A clearance from the FAA would be welcome news as United and other carriers expect a record peak season this year.","While the planes involved older jets, the incidents come amid heightened scrutiny of the aviation industry after a door plug blew out of a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines earlier this year, a near catastrophe that has created a fresh crisis for the manufacturer.",2024-05-20 Walmart says more diners are buying its groceries as fast food gets pricey,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/walmart-earnings-grocery-sales-rise-as-fast-food-prices-increases.html,2024-05-16T17:51:10+0000,"In this articleForget the drive-thru. Walmart wants diners to find a value meal in its grocery aisles.As fast food gets pricier, the nation's largest grocer sees a sales opportunity.On a call with CNBC on Thursday, Walmart Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey said some of the discounter's sales growth in the recent quarter came from customers who turned to its grocery aisles for cheaper meals than they can get at quick-service restaurants.""It's roughly 4.3 times more expensive to eat out than it is to eat at home,"" he said. ""And that's benefiting our business.""As customers see some grocery items stay the same price or even become cheaper, the gap between buying menu items and cooking food at home has grown even wider, he said.Walmart's stock soared to an all-time high Thursday, after it beat Wall Street's quarterly sales and revenue expectations and said it expected its full-year results to be on the high end of, or better than, its previous forecast. Transactions in the U.S. rose 3.8%, as more customers visited its stores and website.Walmart's strong store traffic and quarterly results are at odds with those of restaurant companies, including McDonald's, Starbucks and Yum Brands. Foot traffic to limited-service chains, which includes fast-food and fast-casual restaurants, fell 3.5% in the first quarter, according to Revenue Management Solutions. Restaurant executives blamed bad weather in January and February — and a consumer slowdown, particularly among lower-income diners.Like many restaurants, McDonald's has faced backlash to its prices. An $18 Big Mac combo sold at one of its franchised restaurants in Connecticut went viral on social media, prompting executives to defend the chain's pricing on its conference call. The burger giant reported disappointing U.S. same-store sales growth of 2.5%, suggesting that its foot traffic fell during the quarter.Still, McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinski said consumers, particularly those earning lower incomes, are hunting for deals. The chain will offer a $5 value meal starting June 25 for roughly a month.Not all restaurants have had trouble getting diners to pay higher prices: fast-casual chains such as Chipotle, Wingstop and Sweetgreen all reported strong sales in their most recent quarters.Inflation data from the U.S. Labor Department reflects the difference between the price that customers pay for food they cook at home or pack for lunch, compared with what they pay at a coffee shop or restaurant. As of April, the price of food at home, a category that measures the total cost of food purchased at grocers or other food stores, was up 1.1% year over year. The price of food away from home rose significantly more: 4.1% year over year.On the company's earnings call Thursday, Walmart U.S. CEO John Furner pointed to a newer tool in Walmart's arsenal that it can use to compete more aggressively with restaurants: its new grocery brand, Bettergoods.The premium line includes unique flavors and merchandise tailored for more health-conscious customers or ones with a special diet, such as gluten-free or plant-based items. For example, it includes strawberries and cream-flavored Greek yogurt, curry chicken empanadas, restaurant-style chicken wings and salted caramel oat milk ice cream.Seventy percent of the brand's items are under $5, Furner said — a price point that may catch the eye of shoppers ""trying to feed a family of four, five, [or] six.""— CNBC's Amelia Lucas contributed to this report.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"['In this articleForget the drive-thru.', 'Walmart wants diners to find a value meal in its grocery aisles.', ""As fast food gets pricier, the nation's largest grocer sees a sales opportunity."", ""On a call with CNBC on Thursday, Walmart Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey said some of the discounter's sales growth in the recent quarter came from customers who turned to its grocery aisles for cheaper meals than they can get at quick-service restaurants."", '""It\'s roughly 4.3 times more expensive to eat out than it is to eat at home,"" he said. ""', ""And that's benefiting our business."", '""As customers see some grocery items stay the same price or even become cheaper, the gap between buying menu items and cooking food at home has grown even wider, he said.', ""Walmart's stock soared to an all-time high Thursday, after it beat Wall Street's quarterly sales and revenue expectations and said it expected its full-year results to be on the high end of, or better than, its previous forecast."", 'Transactions in the U.S. rose 3.8%, as more customers visited its stores and website.', ""Walmart's strong store traffic and quarterly results are at odds with those of restaurant companies, including McDonald's, Starbucks and Yum Brands."", 'Foot traffic to limited-service chains, which includes fast-food and fast-casual restaurants, fell 3.5% in the first quarter, according to Revenue Management Solutions.', 'Restaurant executives blamed bad weather in January and February — and a consumer slowdown, particularly among lower-income diners.', ""Like many restaurants, McDonald's has faced backlash to its prices."", ""An $18 Big Mac combo sold at one of its franchised restaurants in Connecticut went viral on social media, prompting executives to defend the chain's pricing on its conference call."", 'The burger giant reported disappointing U.S. same-store sales growth of 2.5%, suggesting that its foot traffic fell during the quarter.', ""Still, McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinski said consumers, particularly those earning lower incomes, are hunting for deals."", 'The chain will offer a $5 value meal starting June 25 for roughly a month.', 'Not all restaurants have had trouble getting diners to pay higher prices: fast-casual chains such as Chipotle, Wingstop and Sweetgreen all reported strong sales in their most recent quarters.', 'Inflation data from the U.S. Labor Departmentreflects the differencebetween the price that customers pay for food they cook at home or pack for lunch, compared with what they pay at a coffee shop or restaurant.', 'As of April, the price of food at home, a category that measures the total cost of food purchased at grocers or other food stores, was up 1.1% year over year.', 'The price of food away from home rose significantly more: 4.1% year over year.', ""On the company's earnings call Thursday, Walmart U.S. CEO John Furner pointed to a newer tool in Walmart's arsenal that it can use to compete more aggressively with restaurants: its new grocery brand, Bettergoods."", 'The premium line includes unique flavors and merchandise tailored for more health-conscious customers or ones with a special diet, such as gluten-free or plant-based items.', 'For example, it includes strawberries and cream-flavored Greek yogurt, curry chicken empanadas, restaurant-style chicken wings and salted caramel oat milk ice cream.', 'Seventy percent of the brand\'s items are under $5, Furner said — a price point that may catch the eye of shoppers ""trying to feed a family of four, five, [or] six.""—', ""CNBC's Amelia Lucas contributed to this report.""]",0.0763173193155215,"The premium line includes unique flavors and merchandise tailored for more health-conscious customers or ones with a special diet, such as gluten-free or plant-based items.","Restaurant executives blamed bad weather in January and February — and a consumer slowdown, particularly among lower-income diners.",0.3580176420509815,"Transactions in the U.S. rose 3.8%, as more customers visited its stores and website.","Foot traffic to limited-service chains, which includes fast-food and fast-casual restaurants, fell 3.5% in the first quarter, according to Revenue Management Solutions.",2024-05-20 FTC investigating TikTok over privacy and security,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/tech/ftc-tiktok-probe-privacy-and-security/index.html," Updated 8:11 PM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","The Federal Trade Commission is investigating TikTok for its data and security practices, two sources told CNN on the condition of anonymity. The probe is yet another complication for the social media platform, which is already facing the threat of a potential US ban or a forced divestment from its Chinese parent company. The sources said that the FTC is probing TikTok over an alleged violation of the Children’s Online Privacy Protection rule, which requires companies to notify parents and obtain consent before collecting data from children under 13. The agency is also investigating whether TikTok violated a portion of the FTC Act that prohibits “unfair or deceptive” business practices, the sources said, in denying that TikTok user data could be accessed by individuals in China. The FTC could bring a suit against TikTok or settle with the company in the coming weeks, according to one of the sources. Politico reported news of the probe earlier. When asked about the investigation, FTC Director of Public Affairs Douglas Farrar replied: “No comment.” TikTok did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The FTC probe comes as TikTok faces an existential threat in the US. Earlier this month, a bipartisan group in the US House of Representatives voted to pass a law forcing TikTok to be sold by ByteDance or face a ban from US app stores. The bill is now before the Senate, and President Joe Biden has said he would sign it if it gets to his desk. Senate leaders, however, have indicated they are taking a deliberate approach — which could lead to delays or even potentially doom the House bill. The short-form video company, owned by Chinese firm ByteDance, has denied assertions that its app poses a national security threat to US citizens. TikTok, which does not operate in China, has said that the Chinese government has never accessed US user data. Cybersecurity experts say Chinese laws require ByteDance to cooperate with that country’s intelligence demands — a fact that, given ByteDance’s ownership of TikTok, could hypothetically put US user data at risk. To address that issue, TikTok has taken steps to store its US user data on cloud servers controlled by US tech giant Oracle and established internal protocols limiting access by non-US employees. TikTok acknowledged to Congress in 2022 that employees based in China could access US user data, following a report that year by BuzzFeed News that ByteDance employees had accessed that information on multiple occasions. TikTok CEO Shou Chew, in his first appearance before Congress last year, also acknowledged that several ByteDance employees were fired for spying on certain US journalists as part of a “misguided attempt” to hunt down leakers within the company.",CNN,26/03/2024,"['The Federal Trade Commission is investigating TikTok for its data and security practices, two sources told CNN on the condition of anonymity.', 'The probe is yet another complication for the social media platform, which is already facing the threat of a potential US ban or a forced divestment from its Chinese parent company.', 'The sources said that the FTC is probing TikTok over an alleged violation of the Children’s Online Privacy Protection rule, which requires companies to notify parents and obtain consent before collecting data from children under 13.', 'The agency is also investigating whether TikTok violated a portion of the FTC Act that prohibits “unfair or deceptive” business practices, the sources said, in denying that TikTok user data could be accessed by individuals in China.', 'The FTC could bring a suit against TikTok or settle with the company in the coming weeks, according to one of the sources.', 'Politico reported news of the probe earlier.', 'When asked about the investigation, FTC Director of Public Affairs Douglas Farrar replied: “No comment.”', 'TikTok did not immediately respond to a request for comment.', 'The FTC probe comes as TikTok faces an existential threat in the US.', 'Earlier this month, a bipartisan group in the US House of Representatives voted to pass a law forcing TikTok to be sold by ByteDance or face a ban from US app stores.', 'The bill is now before the Senate, and President Joe Biden has said he would sign it if it gets to his desk.', 'Senate leaders, however, have indicated they are taking a deliberate approach —which could lead to delays or even potentially doom the House bill.', 'The short-form video company, owned by Chinese firm ByteDance, has denied assertions that its app poses a national security threat to US citizens.', 'TikTok, which does not operate in China, has said that the Chinese government has never accessed US user data.', 'Cybersecurity experts say Chinese laws require ByteDance to cooperate with that country’s intelligence demands—a fact that, given ByteDance’s ownership of TikTok, could hypothetically put US user data at risk.', 'To address that issue, TikTok has taken steps to store its US user data on cloud servers controlled by US tech giant Oracle and established internal protocols limiting access by non-US employees.', 'TikTok acknowledged to Congress in 2022 that employees based in China could access US user data, following a report that year by BuzzFeed News that ByteDance employees had accessed that information on multiple occasions.', 'TikTok CEO Shou Chew, in his first appearance before Congress last year, also acknowledged that several ByteDance employees were fired for spying on certain US journalists as part of a “misguided attempt” to hunt down leakers within the company.']",-0.232320081688102,"The Federal Trade Commission is investigating TikTok for its data and security practices, two sources told CNN on the condition of anonymity.","The probe is yet another complication for the social media platform, which is already facing the threat of a potential US ban or a forced divestment from its Chinese parent company.",-0.8880722284317016,,"Senate leaders, however, have indicated they are taking a deliberate approach —which could lead to delays or even potentially doom the House bill.",2024-05-20 Walgreens to offer its own cheaper version of opioid overdose reversal drug naloxone,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/15/walgreens-opioid-overdose-drug-naloxone.html,2024-05-15T15:37:47+0000,"In this articleWalgreens on Wednesday said it will offer its own cheaper version of the over-the-counter opioid overdose reversal spray naloxone. The drug is available online and will be in all stores at the end of the month. The drugstore retailer aims to boost the availability of the lifesaving medication in the U.S. as the nation grapples with the toll of the opioid epidemic and attempts to bring down alarmingly high drug fatality rates.More than 645,000 people died from overdoses involving any opioid, including prescription and illicit opioids, from 1999 to 2021, according to the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Naloxone can temporarily reverse the effects of an overdose from opioids, including heroin and fentanyl, when administered in time. The drug blocks the effects of opioids on the brain, restoring normal breathing and preventing death.Despite naloxone's efficacy, access to the treatment ""remains limited in many communities,"" according to a Walgreens release. The company said it will sell a two-dose pack of ""Walgreens Brand Naloxone"" for $34.99. That's around $10 cheaper than the over-the-counter branded drug Narcan, which became the first prescription-free version of naloxone to win Food and Drug Administration approval last year. Previously, patients needed a prescription to access naloxone.""That was a concerted decision to really do everything we can to increase accessibility, not just in terms of quantity and availability, but also in price,"" Dr. Priya Mammen, senior medical director in Walgreens' Office of Clinical Integrity, told CNBC in an interview. The company said the launch of its prescription-free naloxone nasal spray comes after the FDA's recent approval of the product. It is the generic equivalent of over-the-counter Narcan, which Walgreens currently offers in its stores.Mammen hopes Walgreens can help reduce the stigma associated with drug overdoses and naloxone use. The drug ""is not just for some people. It's a lifesaving medication that can intervene on anyone at any age, anytime, and it's something that families, individuals and communities can empower themselves by having it available and can be part of the solution,"" she said.",CNBC,15/05/2024,"['In this articleWalgreens on Wednesday said it will offer its own cheaper version of the over-the-counter opioid overdose reversal spray naloxone.', 'The drug is available online and will be in all stores at the end of the month.', 'The drugstore retailer aims to boost the availability of the lifesaving medication in the U.S. as the nation grapples with the toll of the opioid epidemic and attempts to bring down alarmingly high drug fatality rates.', 'More than 645,000 people died from overdoses involving any opioid, including prescription and illicit opioids, from 1999 to 2021, according to the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.', 'Naloxone can temporarily reverse the effects of an overdose from opioids, including heroin and fentanyl, when administered in time.', 'The drug blocks the effects of opioids on the brain, restoring normal breathing and preventing death.', 'Despite naloxone\'s efficacy, access to the treatment ""remains limited in many communities,"" according to a Walgreens release.', 'The company said it will sell a two-dose pack of ""Walgreens Brand Naloxone"" for $34.99.', ""That's around $10 cheaper than the over-the-counter branded drug Narcan, which became the first prescription-free version of naloxone to win Food and Drug Administration approval last year."", 'Previously, patients needed a prescription to access naloxone.', '""That was a concerted decision to really do everything we can to increase accessibility, not just in terms of quantity and availability, but also in price,"" Dr. Priya Mammen, senior medical director in Walgreens\' Office of Clinical Integrity, told CNBC in an interview.', ""The company said the launch of its prescription-free naloxone nasal spray comes after the FDA's recent approval of the product."", 'It is the generic equivalent of over-the-counter Narcan, which Walgreens currently offers in its stores.', 'Mammen hopes Walgreens can help reduce the stigma associated with drug overdoses and naloxone use.', 'The drug ""is not just for some people.', 'It\'s a lifesaving medication that can intervene on anyone at any age, anytime, and it\'s something that families, individuals and communities can empower themselves by having it available and can be part of the solution,"" she said.']",0.039908463065855,"That's around $10 cheaper than the over-the-counter branded drug Narcan, which became the first prescription-free version of naloxone to win Food and Drug Administration approval last year.",The drugstore retailer aims to boost the availability of the lifesaving medication in the U.S. as the nation grapples with the toll of the opioid epidemic and attempts to bring down alarmingly high drug fatality rates.,0.6555501619974772,The drugstore retailer aims to boost the availability of the lifesaving medication in the U.S. as the nation grapples with the toll of the opioid epidemic and attempts to bring down alarmingly high drug fatality rates.,"Despite naloxone's efficacy, access to the treatment ""remains limited in many communities,"" according to a Walgreens release.",2024-05-20 Saudi Arabia’s biggest-ever plane order isn’t going to Boeing,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/business/saudi-arabia-airline-airbus-biggest-order/index.html," Published 11:09 AM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","Saudi Arabia’s national airline has placed an order for 105 Airbus airplanes in the largest-ever deal in the country’s aviation history — another win for troubled Boeing’s European rival. Ibrahim Al-Omar, director general of Saudia Group, the state-controlled owner of the Saudia airline and low-cost carrier Flyadeal, said Monday that the first planes would be delivered in the first quarter of 2026. “The Saudia Group announces today the largest deal in the history of Saudi aviation,” he said in a speech at the Future Aviation Forum in Riyadh, referring to the contract with Airbus. Saudia Group’s current fleet comprises 93 Airbus and 51 Boeing aircraft, according to its website. And the latest deal adds to the group’s existing backlog of Airbus orders of 39 aircraft, the European airplane maker said in a statement. Al-Omar did not specify whether it was the number of airplanes ordered or the total value of the order that made it Saudi Arabia’s biggest-ever aviation deal. When asked by CNN about that, as well as the value of the deal, Saudia Group did not respond, while Airbus declined to comment. But, in a press release, the organizers of the Future Aviation Forum said the new order totaled $19 billion. In a separate statement, Al-Omar said the new order would help realize Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030, a program aimed at diversifying the country’s economy away from oil. A key part of the program is making the kingdom an attractive destination for tourists. “Saudia has ambitious operational objectives to meet growing demand,” Al-Omar said. “We are increasing flights and seat capacity across our existing 100-plus destinations on four continents, with plans for further expansion.” The country hopes to attract 150 million tourists per year by 2030, according to its National Tourism Strategy. News of the Saudi deal comes as Airbus’s main rival Boeing (BA) faces intense scrutiny over a series of safety failures, including a mid-air blowout of part of a fuselage in January. The incident has prompted a number of investigations into Boeing’s practices, an executive shake-up and promises that the company will turn itself around. But Boeing has been struggling ever since fatal crashes of its 737 Max aircraft in 2018 and 2019 resulted in a 20-month grounding of its best-selling plane. The company was also hit by the pandemic, which brought air travel to a near-standstill for months and caused deep losses at most of the airlines that buy Boeing’s planes. Since the start of the grounding in 2019, the company has reported adjusted losses totaling more than $31 billion. Since the beginning of this year, its stock price has tanked by almost 28%. Despite having a backlog of orders amounting to more 5,600 commercial jets, worth $529 billion, Boeing cannot make planes quickly enough each year to turn a profit as it’s working to address its quality issues. Meanwhile, Airbus, reported an order backlog of almost 8,600 aircraft at the end of 2023 and posted a profit of €3.8 billion ($4.1 billion) for the year.",CNN,20/05/2024,"['Saudi Arabia’s national airline has placed an order for 105 Airbus airplanes in the largest-ever deal in the country’s aviation history —another win for troubled Boeing’s European rival.', 'Ibrahim Al-Omar, director general of Saudia Group, the state-controlled owner of the Saudia airline and low-cost carrier Flyadeal, said Monday that the first planes would be delivered in the first quarter of 2026.', '“The Saudia Group announces today the largest deal in the history of Saudi aviation,” he said in a speech at the Future Aviation Forum in Riyadh, referring to the contract with Airbus.', 'Saudia Group’s current fleet comprises93 Airbus and 51 Boeing aircraft, according to its website.', 'And the latest deal adds to the group’s existing backlog of Airbus orders of 39 aircraft, the European airplane maker said in a statement.', 'Al-Omar did not specify whether it was the number of airplanes ordered or the total value of the order that made it Saudi Arabia’s biggest-ever aviation deal.', 'When asked by CNN about that, as well as the value of the deal, Saudia Group did not respond, while Airbus declined to comment.', 'But, in a press release, the organizers of the Future Aviation Forum said the new order totaled $19 billion.', 'In a separate statement, Al-Omar said the new order would help realize Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030, a program aimed at diversifying the country’s economy away from oil.', 'A key part of the program is making the kingdom an attractive destination for tourists.', '“Saudia has ambitious operational objectives to meet growing demand,” Al-Omar said. “', 'We are increasing flights and seat capacity across our existing 100-plus destinations on four continents, with plans for further expansion.”', 'The country hopes to attract 150 million tourists per year by 2030, according to its National Tourism Strategy.', 'News of the Saudi deal comes as Airbus’s main rival Boeing (BA) faces intense scrutiny over a series of safety failures,including a mid-air blowout of part of a fuselage in January.', 'The incident has prompted a number of investigations into Boeing’s practices, an executive shake-up and promises that the company will turn itself around.', 'But Boeing has been struggling ever since fatal crashes of its 737 Max aircraft in 2018 and 2019 resulted in a 20-month grounding of its best-selling plane.', 'The company was also hit by the pandemic, which brought air travel to a near-standstill for months and caused deep losses at most of the airlines that buy Boeing’s planes.', 'Since the start of the grounding in 2019, the company has reported adjusted losses totaling more than $31 billion.', 'Since the beginning of this year, its stock price has tanked by almost 28%.', 'Despite having a backlog of orders amounting to more 5,600 commercial jets, worth $529 billion, Boeing cannot make planes quickly enough each year to turn a profit as it’s working to address its quality issues.', 'Meanwhile, Airbus, reported an order backlog of almost 8,600 aircraft at the end of 2023 and posted a profit of €3.8 billion ($4.1 billion) for the year.']",0.154892474665979,"The country hopes to attract 150 million tourists per year by 2030, according to its National Tourism Strategy.","The company was also hit by the pandemic, which brought air travel to a near-standstill for months and caused deep losses at most of the airlines that buy Boeing’s planes.",0.1397024052483695,Saudi Arabia’s national airline has placed an order for 105 Airbus airplanes in the largest-ever deal in the country’s aviation history —another win for troubled Boeing’s European rival.,"Since the start of the grounding in 2019, the company has reported adjusted losses totaling more than $31 billion.",2024-05-20 McDonald's $5 value meal is coming in June — and staying for just a month,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/15/mcdonalds-5-value-meal-starts-june-25-last-about-a-month.html,2024-05-15T19:00:13+0000,"In this articleMcDonald's is set to offer a $5 value meal in the U.S., but only for a limited time.The promotion will include four items for $5 — a McChicken or McDouble, four-piece chicken nuggets, fries and a drink — and will run for roughly a month, beginning on June 25, according to a person familiar with the offering who was not authorized to speak about it publicly.""We know how much it means to our customers when McDonald's offers meaningful value and communicates it through national advertising. That's been true since our very beginning and never more important than it is today,"" McDonald's said in a statement to CNBC.CNBC last week reported the fast-food giant was working to bring a value offering to menus, with details being discussed and voted on by franchisees. An initial proposal for the meal did not clear necessary hurdles.Coca-Cola added marketing funds to the equation to make the deal more appealing, CNBC reported Friday. In a statement on Wednesday, Coca-Cola said: ""We routinely partner with our customers on marketing programs to meet consumer needs. This helps us grow our businesses together.""Financial terms of that partnership were not disclosed.The monthlong promotion comes at a time when restaurants are finally beginning to feel a long-anticipated consumer pullback.McDonald's recently reported a mixed first quarter, with U.S. same-store sales slightly missing expectations. Higher prices helped grow average checks, but some consumers pulled back as a result of the steeper costs.""Consumers continue to be even more discriminating with every dollar that they spend as they faced elevated prices in their day-to-day spending, which is putting pressure on the [quick-service restaurant] industry,"" CEO Chris Kempczinski said on the company's earnings call on April 30.He added McDonald's has to be ""laser-focused"" on affordability to attract diners.""Great value and affordability have always been a hallmark of McDonald's brand, and all three legs of the stool are coming together to deliver that at a time when our customers really need it. This is the power and promise of the Golden Arches,"" John Palmaccio, McDonald's owner and operator and chair of the Operators National Advertising Fund, said in a statement to CNBC on the $5 promotion.— CNBC's Amelia Lucas contributed to this report.",CNBC,15/05/2024,"[""In this articleMcDonald's is set to offer a $5 value meal in the U.S., but only for a limited time."", 'The promotion will include four items for $5 — a McChicken or McDouble, four-piece chicken nuggets, fries and a drink — and will run for roughly a month, beginning on June 25, according to a person familiar with the offering who was not authorized to speak about it publicly.', '""We know how much it means to our customers when McDonald\'s offers meaningful value and communicates it through national advertising.', 'That\'s been true since our very beginning and never more important than it is today,"" McDonald\'s said in a statement to CNBC.CNBC last week reported the fast-food giant was working to bring a value offering to menus, with details being discussed and voted on by franchisees.', 'An initial proposal for the meal did not clear necessary hurdles.', 'Coca-Colaadded marketing funds to the equation to make the deal more appealing, CNBC reported Friday.', 'In a statement on Wednesday, Coca-Cola said: ""We routinely partner with our customers on marketing programs to meet consumer needs.', 'This helps us grow our businesses together.', '""Financial terms of that partnership were not disclosed.', 'The monthlong promotion comes at a time when restaurants are finally beginning to feel a long-anticipated consumer pullback.', ""McDonald'srecently reported a mixed first quarter, with U.S. same-store sales slightly missing expectations."", 'Higher prices helped grow average checks, but some consumers pulled back as a result of the steeper costs.', '""Consumers continue to be even more discriminating with every dollar that they spend as they faced elevated prices in their day-to-day spending, which is putting pressure on the [quick-service restaurant] industry,"" CEO Chris Kempczinski said on the company\'s earnings call on April 30.He added McDonald\'s has to be ""laser-focused"" on affordability to attract diners.', '""Great value and affordability have always been a hallmark of McDonald\'s brand, and all three legs of the stool are coming together to deliver that at a time when our customers really need it.', 'This is the power and promise of the Golden Arches,"" John Palmaccio, McDonald\'s owner and operator and chair of the Operators National Advertising Fund, said in a statement to CNBC on the $5 promotion.—', ""CNBC's Amelia Lucas contributed to this report.""]",0.1443589425847401,"""Great value and affordability have always been a hallmark of McDonald's brand, and all three legs of the stool are coming together to deliver that at a time when our customers really need it.",An initial proposal for the meal did not clear necessary hurdles.,0.1401060989924839,"Coca-Colaadded marketing funds to the equation to make the deal more appealing, CNBC reported Friday.","McDonald'srecently reported a mixed first quarter, with U.S. same-store sales slightly missing expectations.",2024-05-20 "Target is cutting prices on up to 5,000 items to lure back inflation-weary shoppers",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/business/target-price-cuts/index.html," Updated 1:53 PM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","Target has slashed prices on more than 1,500 popular items beginning immediately, ranging from butter to laundry detergent, as the retailer attempts to attract inflation-wary shoppers turned off by high prices. Prices have dropped effective Monday, with “thousands more price cuts” — amounting to 5,000 items — being reduced over the summer, the retailer announced. The lower prices will aim to “collectively save consumers millions of dollars” on household staples and everyday items such as milk, fresh fruit, diapers and even pet food. The changes affect name brands, like Clorox and Prime energy drink, as well as its house brands. Although prices vary depending on city, Target highlighted some examples with a 75-count canister of Clorox wipes being reduced to $4.99 from $5.79 and one pound of unsalted butter from its Good & Gather brand dropping to $3.79 from $3.99. Other major retailers, like Ikea and Aldi, have been reducing prices in recent months in an attempt to re-attract consumers into stores and entice them to spend money, since many have slashed their spending because of inflation. Shoppers have pulled back for a year now as costs have risen 20% to 30% higher than they were three years ago and as incomes failed to keep up, Sarah Wyeth, managing director, retail and consumer with S&P Global Ratings, recently told CNN. Retail sales growth has taken a hit because of high prices: Last month, retail sales were unchanged from March, when spending increased by a downwardly revised 0.6%, the Commerce Department recently reported. In April, spending missed the 0.4% increase that economists had projected, according to FactSet. The figures are adjusted for seasonal swings but not inflation. By comparison, a year ago, retail sales surged by 3%. For Target, the price cuts are also an attempt to turn around sales, which fell last year for the first time since 2016, amid a predicted sluggish 2024. The retailer will give an update on this year’s sales when it reports earnings Wednesday. Like other big box stores, business has slowed for Target since shoppers stocked up at its locations and online during the height of the pandemic in 2020 and 2021. Since its surge, Target’s core middle-class customer base has been strained by higher prices and pulled back on discretionary goods such as home decor, electronics and nonessential clothing. In response, Target recently created a new house brand called Dealworthy to take on dollar stores and Walmart. The budget-friendly lineup consists of 400 items, from phone chargers to disposable plates and even underwear.",CNN,20/05/2024,"['Target has slashed prices on more than 1,500 popular items beginning immediately, ranging from butter to laundry detergent, as the retailer attempts to attract inflation-wary shoppers turned off by high prices.', 'Prices have dropped effective Monday, with “thousands more price cuts” — amounting to 5,000 items — being reduced over the summer, the retailer announced.', 'The lower prices will aim to “collectively save consumers millions of dollars” on household staples and everyday items such as milk, fresh fruit, diapers and even pet food.', 'The changes affect name brands, like Clorox and Prime energy drink, as well as its house brands.', 'Although prices vary depending on city, Target highlighted some examples with a 75-count canister of Clorox wipes being reduced to$4.99from$5.79 and one pound of unsalted butter from its Good & Gather brand dropping to $3.79 from $3.99.', 'Other major retailers, like Ikea and Aldi, have been reducing prices in recent months in an attempt to re-attract consumers into stores and entice them to spend money, since many have slashed their spending because of inflation.', 'Shoppers have pulled back for a year now as costs have risen 20% to 30% higher than they were three years ago and as incomes failed to keep up, Sarah Wyeth, managing director, retail and consumer with S&P Global Ratings, recently told CNN.', 'Retail sales growth has taken a hit because of high prices: Last month, retail sales were unchanged from March, when spending increased by a downwardly revised 0.6%, the Commerce Department recently reported.', 'In April, spending missed the 0.4% increase that economists had projected, according to FactSet.', 'The figures are adjusted for seasonal swings but not inflation.', 'By comparison, a year ago, retail sales surged by 3%.', 'For Target, the price cuts are also an attempt to turn around sales, which fell last year for the first time since 2016, amid a predicted sluggish 2024.', 'The retailer will give an update on this year’s sales when it reports earnings Wednesday.', 'Like other big box stores, business has slowed for Target since shoppers stocked up at its locations and online during the height of the pandemic in 2020 and 2021.', 'Since its surge, Target’s core middle-class customer base has been strained by higher prices and pulled back on discretionary goods such as home decor, electronics and nonessential clothing.', 'In response, Target recently created a new house brand called Dealworthy to take on dollar stores and Walmart.', 'The budget-friendly lineup consists of 400 items, from phone chargers to disposable plates and even underwear.']",0.1811050650897248,"The changes affect name brands, like Clorox and Prime energy drink, as well as its house brands.","For Target, the price cuts are also an attempt to turn around sales, which fell last year for the first time since 2016, amid a predicted sluggish 2024.",-0.3286035706599553,"By comparison, a year ago, retail sales surged by 3%.","For Target, the price cuts are also an attempt to turn around sales, which fell last year for the first time since 2016, amid a predicted sluggish 2024.",2024-05-20 Red Lobster files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/20/red-lobster-bankruptcy.html,2024-05-20T19:51:14+0000,"Red Lobster has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, continuing the process to shrink its footprint and find a buyer, the company said in a statement.The seafood chain also said it has a so-called stalking horse bid from its existing lenders to buy the company, unless a higher bid comes along.CNBC reported last month Red Lobster was seeking a buyer, weighed down by significant debt and long-term leases. The company recently appointed a restructuring expert — Jonathan Tibus, a managing partner with advisory firm Alvarez & Marsal — as its CEO.In a court filing, Tibus blamed a ""difficult macroeconomic environment, a bloated and underperforming restaurant footprint, failed or ill-advised strategic initiatives, and increased competition within the restaurant industry"" for the chain's need to file for Chapter 11 protection.The chain's real estate portfolio is also a ""huge problem"" created, in part, by Red Lobster's former owners Golden Gate Capital, a source familiar with the company told CNBC. When Darden Restaurants sold Red Lobster to the private equity firm in 2014, it funded the $2.1 billion acquisition partially through a $1.5 billion sale-leaseback agreement, the companies said previously. Under the terms of the arrangement, the majority, if not all, of Red Lobster's locations were sold off, and the chain had to start paying rent on properties it once owned while Golden Gate reaped the profits, the source said. At the time, it was tough to predict that Red Lobster would see sales drop as much as they have. Given how much revenue has fallen, the chain can no longer afford those leases.Red Lobster currently operates 551 locations in the U.S. and 27 restaurants in Canada. The chain closed 93 underperforming locations on May 13 and is asking the bankruptcy court to reject 108 of its leases to further slim down its footprint.The company has 36,000 employees, most of whom work in part-time roles.Orlando, Florida-based Red Lobster has assets between $1 billion and $10 billion and estimated liabilities of $1 billion to $10 billion, according to the bankruptcy filing. Its largest creditor is distributor Performance Food Group, which is claiming the company owes it $24.4 million.""This restructuring is the best path forward for Red Lobster,"" Tibus said in a statement late Sunday. ""It allows us to address several financial and operational challenges and emerge stronger and re-focused on our growth. The support we've received from our lenders and vendors will help ensure that we can complete the sale process quickly and efficiently while remaining focused on our employees and guests.""Red Lobster was founded in 1968 and purchased by General Mills two years later. In 1995, General Mills spun off its restaurant division into Darden, which also housed sister chain Olive Garden.Nearly two decades later, Darden sold Red Lobster to Golden Gate. In 2016, Thai Union Group, a seafood supplier and one of the chain's longtime vendors, bought a stake in the company. In 2020, Thai Union, members of Red Lobster management and investors using the alias Seafood Alliance bought out Golden Gate's remaining stake in the chain.Although Red Lobster survived the pandemic, its business has struggled since then. The chain's traffic has tumbled about 30% since 2019, according to the bankruptcy filing.The company's longtime CEO, Kim Lopdrup, also retired in 2021, beginning a revolving door of CEOs that left the chain with little stability to turn around the flailing business. Tibus is Red Lobster's third chief executive in as many years.In fiscal 2023, the company reported a net loss of $76 million. Some of that loss was driven by its disastrous ""endless shrimp"" promotion. Last year, it changed the offer from once a week to daily in an effort to boost slower sales in the second half of the year. But the offer juiced business too much as diners sought cheap deals, pressuring Red Lobster's bottom line.According to a court filing, the ill-conceived promotion's actual aim may have been more about boosting Thai Union's own sales. Red Lobster got rid of two of its shrimp suppliers under interim CEO Paul Kenny's leadership, leaving Thai Union as its sole supplier of the crustacean. That decision led to higher costs for Red Lobster, according to the filing. The debtors are also investigating if Thai Union and Kenny pushed excessively for in-store promotions, which often led to major shortages of shrimp.Correction: Performance Food Group is claiming Red Lobster owes it $24.4 million. An earlier version misstated the figure.",CNBC,20/05/2024,"['Red Lobster has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, continuing the process to shrink its footprint and find a buyer, the company said in a statement.', 'The seafood chain also said it has a so-called stalking horse bid from its existing lenders to buy the company, unless a higher bid comes along.', 'CNBC reported last month Red Lobster was seeking a buyer, weighed down by significant debt and long-term leases.', 'The company recently appointed a restructuring expert — Jonathan Tibus, a managing partner with advisory firm Alvarez & Marsal — as its CEO.In a court filing, Tibus blamed a ""difficult macroeconomic environment, a bloated and underperforming restaurant footprint, failed or ill-advised strategic initiatives, and increased competition within the restaurant industry"" for the chain\'s need to file for Chapter 11 protection.', 'The chain\'s real estate portfolio is also a ""huge problem"" created, in part, by Red Lobster\'s former owners Golden Gate Capital, a source familiar with the company told CNBC.', 'When Darden Restaurants sold Red Lobster to the private equity firm in 2014, it funded the $2.1 billion acquisition partially through a $1.5 billion sale-leaseback agreement, the companies said previously.', ""Under the terms of the arrangement, the majority, if not all, of Red Lobster's locations were sold off, and the chain had to start paying rent on properties it once owned while Golden Gate reaped the profits, the source said."", 'At the time, it was tough to predict that Red Lobster would see sales drop as much as they have.', 'Given how much revenue has fallen, the chain can no longer afford those leases.', 'Red Lobster currently operates 551 locations in the U.S. and 27 restaurants in Canada.', 'The chain closed 93 underperforming locations on May 13 and is asking the bankruptcy court to reject 108 of its leases to further slim down its footprint.', 'The company has 36,000 employees, most of whom work in part-time roles.', 'Orlando, Florida-based Red Lobster has assets between $1 billion and $10 billion and estimated liabilities of $1 billion to $10 billion, according to the bankruptcy filing.', 'Its largest creditor is distributor Performance Food Group, which is claiming the company owes it $24.4 million.', '""This restructuring is the best path forward for Red Lobster,"" Tibus said in a statement late Sunday. ""', 'It allows us to address several financial and operational challenges and emerge stronger and re-focused on our growth.', ""The support we've received from our lenders and vendors will help ensure that we can complete the sale process quickly and efficiently while remaining focused on our employees and guests."", '""Red Lobster was founded in 1968 and purchased by General Mills two years later.', 'In 1995, General Mills spun off its restaurant division into Darden, which also housed sister chain Olive Garden.', 'Nearly two decades later, Darden sold Red Lobster to Golden Gate.', ""In 2016, Thai Union Group, a seafood supplier and one of the chain's longtime vendors, bought a stake in the company."", ""In 2020, Thai Union, members of Red Lobster management and investors using the alias Seafood Alliance bought out Golden Gate's remaining stake in the chain."", 'Although Red Lobster survived the pandemic, its business has struggled since then.', ""The chain's traffic has tumbled about 30% since 2019, according to the bankruptcy filing."", ""The company's longtime CEO, Kim Lopdrup, also retired in 2021, beginning a revolving door of CEOs that left the chain with little stability to turn around the flailing business."", ""Tibus is Red Lobster's third chief executive in as many years."", 'In fiscal 2023, the company reported a net loss of $76 million.', 'Some of that loss was driven by its disastrous ""endless shrimp"" promotion.', 'Last year, it changed the offer from once a week to daily in an effort to boost slower sales in the second half of the year.', ""But the offer juiced business too much as diners sought cheap deals, pressuring Red Lobster's bottom line."", ""According to a court filing, the ill-conceived promotion's actual aim may have been more about boosting Thai Union's own sales."", ""Red Lobster got rid of two of its shrimp suppliers under interim CEO Paul Kenny's leadership, leaving Thai Union as its sole supplier of the crustacean."", 'That decision led to higher costs for Red Lobster, according to the filing.', 'The debtors are also investigating if Thai Union and Kenny pushed excessively for in-store promotions, which often led to major shortages of shrimp.', 'Correction: Performance Food Group is claiming Red Lobster owes it $24.4 million.', 'An earlier version misstated the figure.']",-0.0049559407481681,The support we've received from our lenders and vendors will help ensure that we can complete the sale process quickly and efficiently while remaining focused on our employees and guests.,"The company recently appointed a restructuring expert — Jonathan Tibus, a managing partner with advisory firm Alvarez & Marsal — as its CEO.In a court filing, Tibus blamed a ""difficult macroeconomic environment, a bloated and underperforming restaurant footprint, failed or ill-advised strategic initiatives, and increased competition within the restaurant industry"" for the chain's need to file for Chapter 11 protection.",-0.3631059433284558,It allows us to address several financial and operational challenges and emerge stronger and re-focused on our growth.,"The chain's traffic has tumbled about 30% since 2019, according to the bankruptcy filing.",2024-05-20 "Dodge and Ram boss Tim Kuniskis, father of the Hellcat, to retire from Stellantis",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/17/dodge-ram-boss-tim-kuniskis-to-retire-from-stellantis.html,2024-05-17T16:57:09+0000,"In this articleDETROIT – Stellantis' Dodge and Ram brands CEO Tim Kuniskis is retiring after a nearly 32-year career with the automaker and its predecessors, the company announced Friday.Kuniskis, who has led several of the carmaker's brands in North America, is best known for leading Dodge for most of the last decade or so. He is considered the ""father"" of Dodge's high-performance Hellcat models and ""the unofficial spokesman"" for American muscle cars.During his tenure, Dodge reestablished itself as a quintessential American muscle car brand. The brand did so with vehicles such as the more than 700 horsepower Challenger and Charger Hellcat models and controversial Challenger Demon drag race cars.Kuniskis will be replaced by Chrysler brand CEO Christine Feuell, who will lead Ram in addition to Chrysler, and Matt McAlear, who will be promoted from Dodge's sales lead to brand CEO and a member of Stellantis' top executive team. The appointments are effective June 1, the company said.The changes come as Stellantis carries out a restructuring, including layoffs and cost cutting. It has struggled with U.S. sales, which declined 1.2% last year in a market that grew 12.3%. The company was the only major automaker to report a yearly decline, according to Motor intelligence data.""I want to take the opportunity to warmly thank Tim for his passion, commitment and contributions to Stellantis and in defining the vision of the future electrified Ram and Dodge brands. I wish him well in his retirement,"" Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares said in a release. ""I am confident that Chris will continue the work of Tim in leading the iconic Ram brand. Matt will bring a fresh perspective, while continuing to draw on the heritage of our iconic Dodge brand and leading the transition of the brand toward a sustainable future.""While the company did not invest in all-new products for Dodge, Kuniskis, a salesperson and marketer, was able to grow awareness and sales of the brand's Charger, Challenger and Durango vehicles over the years. Dodge often sparked interest by increasing V-8 engine performance or announcing new ""buzz"" models.Kuniskis has been a member of Stellantis' top executive team since the company was established through a merger of Fiat Chrysler and French automaker PSA Groupe in January 2021. He also served on the top board for Fiat Chrysler, under late CEO Sergio Marchionne.Kuniskis' departure is the latest in a string of changes to the company since the automaker was established. Recent changes have include a shuffle of Jeep's top executives; North America head Mark Stewart leaving to become CEO of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.; and a shakeup late last year of the company's international operations like the South America and Asia-Pacific regions, including China.",CNBC,17/05/2024,"[""In this articleDETROIT – Stellantis' Dodge and Ram brands CEO Tim Kuniskis is retiring after a nearly 32-year career with the automaker and its predecessors, the company announced Friday."", ""Kuniskis, who has led several of the carmaker's brands in North America, is best known for leading Dodge for most of the last decade or so."", 'He is considered the ""father"" of Dodge\'s high-performance Hellcat models and ""the unofficial spokesman"" for American muscle cars.', 'During his tenure, Dodge reestablished itself as a quintessential American muscle car brand.', 'The brand did so with vehicles such as the more than 700 horsepower Challenger and Charger Hellcat models and controversial Challenger Demon drag race cars.', ""Kuniskis will be replaced by Chrysler brand CEO Christine Feuell, who will lead Ram in addition to Chrysler, and Matt McAlear, who will be promoted from Dodge's sales lead to brand CEO and a member of Stellantis' top executive team."", 'The appointments are effective June 1, the company said.', 'The changes come as Stellantis carries out a restructuring, including layoffs and cost cutting.', 'It has struggled with U.S. sales, which declined 1.2% last year in a market that grew 12.3%.', 'The company was the only major automaker to report a yearly decline, according to Motor intelligence data.', '""I want to take the opportunity to warmly thank Tim for his passion, commitment and contributions to Stellantis and in defining the vision of the future electrified Ram and Dodge brands.', 'I wish him well in his retirement,"" Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares said in a release. ""', 'I am confident that Chris will continue the work of Tim in leading the iconic Ram brand.', 'Matt will bring a fresh perspective, while continuing to draw on the heritage of our iconic Dodge brand and leading the transition of the brand toward a sustainable future.', '""While the company did not invest in all-new products for Dodge, Kuniskis, a salesperson and marketer, was able to grow awareness and sales of the brand\'s Charger, Challenger and Durango vehicles over the years.', 'Dodge often sparked interest by increasing V-8 engine performance or announcing new ""buzz"" models.', ""Kuniskis has been a member of Stellantis' top executive team since the company was established through a merger of Fiat Chrysler and French automaker PSA Groupe in January 2021."", 'He also served on the top board for Fiat Chrysler, under late CEO Sergio Marchionne.', ""Kuniskis' departure is the latest in a string of changes to the company since the automaker was established."", ""Recent changes have include a shuffle of Jeep's top executives; North America head Mark Stewart leaving to become CEO of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.; and a shakeup late last year of the company's international operations like the South America and Asia-Pacific regions, including China.""]",0.2612220211553282,"""I want to take the opportunity to warmly thank Tim for his passion, commitment and contributions to Stellantis and in defining the vision of the future electrified Ram and Dodge brands.","It has struggled with U.S. sales, which declined 1.2% last year in a market that grew 12.3%.",0.1920280575752258,"""While the company did not invest in all-new products for Dodge, Kuniskis, a salesperson and marketer, was able to grow awareness and sales of the brand's Charger, Challenger and Durango vehicles over the years.","It has struggled with U.S. sales, which declined 1.2% last year in a market that grew 12.3%.",2024-05-20 AMC's meme stock windfall may help it pay down a massive debt load,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/14/amc-news-roaring-kitty-meme-stock-rally-may-help-with-debt-payments.html,2024-05-14T20:21:15+0000,"In this articleCan AMC Entertainment capitalize on a second meme craze?The stock, alongside GameStop, surged this week after ""Roaring Kitty,"" the man who inspired the massive short squeeze of 2021, posted online for the first time in nearly three years. The return of Roaring Kitty, whose legal name is Keith Gill, has led AMC shares to more than double since Friday's close. They rose above $6 in afternoon trading Tuesday.The last time these retail investors rallied around AMC and its stock surged, the movie theater chain was able to avoid bankruptcy. Now, it has a chance to put a dent in its substantial debt load.CEO Adam Aron made three major acquisitions ""in a relatively short amount of time"" after taking over the company in 2015, which included theater chains Carmike, Odeon and Nordic, said Eric Handler, managing director at Roth MKM. AMC spent about $3 billion on the deals collectively.While the acquisitions bolstered the size AMC's theater network, they also levered the company's balance sheet, Handler said.""So, when the pandemic hit, they sort of got a double whammy because they were already highly levered and then they had to raise more debt to survive and give them more cash,"" Handler said.Since the beginning of 2022, AMC has paid down nearly $1 billion of its debt, but about $4.6 billion remains.AMC has around $20 million due in 2024 and $118 million due in 2025, which is ""not a hurdle,"" according to Wedbush analyst Alicia Reese. But the looming $2.96 billion set for collection in 2026 requires the most attention.""I think they'll be able to renegotiate a portion of it, but a lot of it's probably just going to get extended maturities,"" Reese told CNBC.Lenders have been willing to renegotiate terms, but a bump in share price could allow AMC to secure better deals.Currently, AMC is paying about $100 million every quarter in interest expenses, which is eating into its potential profits. With the box office still recovering from pandemic- and strike-related production shutdowns, AMC has not been able to absorb its fixed expenses, such as rent, employee payroll and other operational costs, said Eric Wold, senior analyst at B. Riley Securities.""What to me matters is whether or not, like they did a few years ago, is can you take advantage of this to bolster their balance sheet?"" he said.AMC raised $250 million of new equity capital in a sale that wrapped up Monday, just as the meme stock craze was revived. The cinema chain sold 72.5 million shares in an at-the-market equity offering that started in late March. AMC sold the stock at an average price of $3.45 per share before commissions and fees. The majority of stock was sold prior to the stock price jump.""The recent surge in the stock presents an additional opportunity to raise equity funds that can support liquidity and debt reduction, eventually moving AMC to a structure that could facilitate institutional support,"" James Goss, analyst at Barrington Research, wrote in a note to investors on Tuesday.",CNBC,14/05/2024,"['In this articleCan AMC Entertainment capitalize on a second meme craze?The stock, alongside GameStop, surged this week after ""Roaring Kitty,"" the man who inspired the massive short squeeze of 2021, posted online for the first time in nearly three years.', ""The return of Roaring Kitty, whose legal name is Keith Gill, has led AMC shares to more than double since Friday's close."", 'They rose above $6 in afternoon trading Tuesday.', 'The last time these retail investors rallied around AMC and its stock surged, the movie theater chain was able to avoid bankruptcy.', 'Now, it has a chance to put a dent in its substantial debt load.', 'CEO Adam Aron made three major acquisitions ""in a relatively short amount of time"" after taking over the company in 2015, which included theater chains Carmike, Odeon and Nordic, said Eric Handler, managing director at Roth MKM.', 'AMC spent about $3 billion on the deals collectively.', ""While the acquisitions bolstered the size AMC's theater network, they also levered the company's balance sheet, Handler said."", '""So, when the pandemic hit, they sort of got a double whammy because they were already highly levered and then they had to raise more debt to survive and give them more cash,"" Handler said.', 'Since the beginning of 2022, AMC has paid down nearly $1 billion of its debt, but about $4.6 billion remains.', 'AMC has around $20 million due in 2024 and $118 million due in 2025, which is ""not a hurdle,"" according to Wedbush analyst Alicia Reese.', 'But the looming $2.96 billion set for collection in 2026 requires the most attention.', '""I think they\'ll be able to renegotiate a portion of it, but a lot of it\'s probably just going to get extended maturities,"" Reese told CNBC.Lenders have been willing to renegotiate terms, but a bump in share price could allow AMC to secure better deals.', 'Currently, AMC is paying about $100 million every quarter in interest expenses, which is eating into its potential profits.', 'With the box office still recovering from pandemic- and strike-related production shutdowns, AMC has not been able to absorb its fixed expenses, such as rent, employee payroll and other operational costs, said Eric Wold, senior analystatB. Riley Securities.', '""What to me matters is whether or not, like they did a few years ago, is can you take advantage of this to bolster their balance sheet?""', 'he said.', 'AMC raised $250 million of new equity capital in a sale that wrapped up Monday, just as the meme stock craze was revived.', 'The cinema chain sold 72.5 million shares in an at-the-market equity offering that started in late March.', 'AMC sold the stock at an average price of $3.45 per share before commissions and fees.', 'The majority of stock was sold prior to the stock price jump.', '""The recent surge in the stock presents an additional opportunity to raise equity funds that can support liquidity and debt reduction, eventually moving AMC to a structure that could facilitate institutional support,"" James Goss, analyst at Barrington Research, wrote in a note to investors on Tuesday.']",0.1371761173164336,"""I think they'll be able to renegotiate a portion of it, but a lot of it's probably just going to get extended maturities,"" Reese told CNBC.Lenders have been willing to renegotiate terms, but a bump in share price could allow AMC to secure better deals.","""So, when the pandemic hit, they sort of got a double whammy because they were already highly levered and then they had to raise more debt to survive and give them more cash,"" Handler said.",0.6805222172003526,"The return of Roaring Kitty, whose legal name is Keith Gill, has led AMC shares to more than double since Friday's close.","With the box office still recovering from pandemic- and strike-related production shutdowns, AMC has not been able to absorb its fixed expenses, such as rent, employee payroll and other operational costs, said Eric Wold, senior analystatB. Riley Securities.",2024-05-20 Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama vote against UAW union membership,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/17/uaw-vote-mercedes-benz-alabama.html,2024-05-17T21:24:27+0000,"Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama have voted against union representation by the United Auto Workers, the National Labor Relations Board said Friday.The results are a blow to the UAW's organizing efforts a month after the Detroit union won an organizing drive of roughly 4,330 Volkswagen plant workers in Tennessee. Voting started Monday and ended Friday.Union organizing failed with 56% of the vote, or 2,642 workers, casting ballots against the UAW, according to the NLRB, which oversaw the election. More than 90% of the 5,075 eligible Mercedes-Benz workers voted in the election, according to the results.The NLRB said 51 ballots were challenged and not counted, but they aren't determinative to the outcome of the election. There were five void ballots. The union and company have five business days to file objections to the election, including any alleged interference, according to the NLRB. If no objections are filed, the election result will be certified, and the union will have to wait one year to file for a union election for a similar bargaining unit.Mercedes-Benz in a statement said company officials ""look forward to continuing to work directly with our Team Members to ensure [Mercedes-Benz US International] is not only their employer of choice, but a place they would recommend to friends and family.""The loss is expected to hurt the UAW in an unprecedented organizing drive launched late last year of 13 non-union automakers in the U.S. after securing record contracts with Detroit automakers Ford Motor, General Motors and Stellantis. Those agreements included significant wage increase, reinstatement of cost-of-living adjustments and other benefits.UAW President Shawn Fain said while the Mercedes-Benz vote was obviously not the result the union wanted, it was a valiant effort, adding the vote ""isn't a failure"" but a ""bump in the road.""""While this loss stings, I'll tell you this, we're going to keep our heads up, keep our heads up high. These workers have nothing to do but be proud in the effort they put forth and what they've done,"" he said Friday during a media conference. ""We fought the good fight and we're going to continue on, continue forward. Ultimately, these workers here are going to win.""The Mercedes-Benz vote was expected to be more challenging for the union than the Volkswagen plant in Tennessee, where the union had already established a presence after two failed organizing drives in the past decade and where it faced less opposition from the automaker.Stephen Silvia, author of ""The UAW's Southern Gamble: Organizing Workers at Foreign-Owned Vehicle Plants,"" noted Mercedes-Benz replaced the plant's leader weeks ahead of the election. He said companies routinely do this, promising workers changes at their facilities in an effort to stave of organizing.""Companies do anti-union campaigns because they can be effective, and I think this one was effective,"" said Silvia, a professor at American University in Washington, D.C. ""A common piece of an anti-union campaign is firing the plant manager ... That seems to have persuaded enough of the workers to vote against the union.""Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey, who was one of six Republican governors to condemn the union's organizing drive, hailed the outcome of the vote.""The workers in Vance have spoken, and they have spoken clearly! Alabama is not Michigan, and we are not the Sweet Home to the UAW. We urge the UAW to respect the results of this secret ballot election,"" she said.Workers at Mercedes-Benz's Tuscaloosa plant, located about 60 miles southwest of Birmingham, have produced more than 4 million vehicles since the plant opened in 1997, including 295,000 vehicles in 2023, according to the plant's website.The Alabama plant currently produces vehicles such as the gas-powered GLE and GLS Maybach SUVs as well as the all-electric EQS and EQE SUVs.The NLRB last week said it continues to process and investigate open unfair labor practice charges filed by the UAW against automakers, including six unfair labor practice charges against Mercedes-Benz since March.Fain said Friday the union would continue to move forward with those charges. He declined to say whether the union plans to challenge the election results, saying he'd ""leave that"" to the union's legal team.The charges allege that Mercedes-Benz has ""disciplined employees for discussing unionization at work, prohibited distribution of union materials and paraphernalia, surveilled employees, discharged union supporters, forced employees to attend captive audience meetings, and made statements suggesting that union activity is futile,"" the NLRB said.The union has filed other charges against automakers Honda, Hyundai, Lucid, Rivian, Tesla and Toyota, according to the NLRB.",CNBC,17/05/2024,"['Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama have voted against union representation by the United Auto Workers, the National Labor Relations Board said Friday.', ""The results are a blow to the UAW's organizing efforts a month after the Detroit union won an organizing drive of roughly 4,330 Volkswagen plant workers in Tennessee."", 'Voting started Monday and ended Friday.', 'Union organizing failed with 56% of the vote, or 2,642 workers, casting ballots against the UAW, according to the NLRB, which oversaw the election.', 'More than 90% of the 5,075 eligible Mercedes-Benz workers voted in the election, according to the results.', ""The NLRB said 51 ballots were challenged and not counted, but they aren't determinative to the outcome of the election."", 'There were five void ballots.', 'The union and company have five business days to file objections to the election, including any alleged interference, accordingto the NLRB.', 'If no objections are filed, the election result will be certified, and the union will have to wait one year to file for a union election for a similar bargaining unit.', 'Mercedes-Benz in a statement said company officials ""look forward to continuing to work directly with our Team Members to ensure [Mercedes-Benz US International] is not only their employer of choice, but a place they would recommend to friends and family.', '""The loss is expected to hurt the UAW in an unprecedented organizing drive launched late last year of 13 non-union automakers in the U.S. after securing record contracts with Detroit automakers Ford Motor, General Motors and Stellantis.', 'Those agreements included significant wage increase, reinstatement of cost-of-living adjustments and other benefits.', 'UAW President Shawn Fain said while the Mercedes-Benz vote was obviously not the result the union wanted, it was a valiant effort, adding the vote ""isn\'t a failure"" but a ""bump in the road.', '""""While this loss stings, I\'ll tell you this, we\'re going to keep our heads up, keep our heads up high.', 'These workers have nothing to do but be proud in the effort they put forth and what they\'ve done,"" he said Friday during a media conference. ""', ""We fought the good fight and we're going to continue on, continue forward."", 'Ultimately, these workers here are going to win.', '""The Mercedes-Benz vote was expected to be more challenging for the union than the Volkswagen plant in Tennessee, where the union had already established a presence after two failed organizing drives in the past decade and where it faced less opposition from the automaker.', 'Stephen Silvia,authorof ""The UAW\'s Southern Gamble: Organizing Workers at Foreign-Owned Vehicle Plants,"" noted Mercedes-Benz replaced the plant\'s leader weeks ahead of the election.', 'He said companies routinely do this, promising workers changes at their facilities in an effort to stave of organizing.', '""Companies do anti-union campaigns because they can be effective, and I think this one was effective,"" said Silvia, a professor at American University in Washington, D.C. ""A common piece of an anti-union campaign is firing the plant manager ... That seems to have persuaded enough of the workers to vote against the union.', '""Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey, who was one of six Republican governors to condemn the union\'s organizing drive, hailed the outcome of the vote.', '""The workers in Vance have spoken, and they have spoken clearly!', 'Alabama is not Michigan, and we are not the Sweet Home to the UAW.', 'We urge the UAW to respect the results of this secret ballot election,"" she said.', ""Workers at Mercedes-Benz's Tuscaloosa plant, located about 60 miles southwest of Birmingham, have produced more than 4 million vehicles since the plant opened in 1997, including 295,000 vehicles in 2023, according to the plant's website."", 'The Alabama plant currently produces vehicles such as the gas-powered GLE and GLS Maybach SUVs as well as the all-electric EQS and EQE SUVs.', 'The NLRB last week said it continues to process and investigate open unfair labor practice charges filed by the UAW against automakers, including six unfair labor practice charges against Mercedes-Benz since March.', 'Fain said Friday the union would continue to move forward with those charges.', 'He declined to say whether the union plans to challenge the election results, saying he\'d ""leave that"" to the union\'s legal team.', 'The charges allege that Mercedes-Benz has ""disciplined employees for discussing unionization at work, prohibited distribution of union materials and paraphernalia, surveilled employees, discharged union supporters, forced employees to attend captive audience meetings, and made statements suggesting that union activity is futile,"" the NLRB said.', 'The union has filed other charges against automakers Honda, Hyundai, Lucid, Rivian, Tesla and Toyota, according to the NLRB.']",0.0311893796263664,"Mercedes-Benz in a statement said company officials ""look forward to continuing to work directly with our Team Members to ensure [Mercedes-Benz US International] is not only their employer of choice, but a place they would recommend to friends and family.","The NLRB last week said it continues to process and investigate open unfair labor practice charges filed by the UAW against automakers, including six unfair labor practice charges against Mercedes-Benz since March.",0.2721788287162781,"Those agreements included significant wage increase, reinstatement of cost-of-living adjustments and other benefits.","""The loss is expected to hurt the UAW in an unprecedented organizing drive launched late last year of 13 non-union automakers in the U.S. after securing record contracts with Detroit automakers Ford Motor, General Motors and Stellantis.",2024-05-20 Shrinkflation: Ritz reduces content by 30% but price remains same,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c51nyq0nxp0o,2024-05-17T17:44:58.577Z,"The number of Ritz crackers per box has been reduced by up to 30% but the price has remained the same. The size difference was first highlighted by The Grocer and confirmed by Mondelez, which owns the Ritz brand. Mondelez is being accused of ""shrinkflation"", where prices are kept the same but content reduced. Shelf prices in popular British supermarkets have remained the same with a box costing £1.25 in Tesco and Asda and £1.50 in Morrisons. The 200g packs of Original and Cheese crackers have now been replaced by packs weighing 150g and 140g. A spokesperson for Mondelez International confirmed the size change to the BBC. “We understand the economic pressures that consumers continue to face and any changes to our product sizes is a last resort for our business,"" they said, adding that the food producer is experiencing ""significantly higher input costs"" across its supply chain as ingredients cost far more than they had previously. It added that costs for energy, packaging and transport remain high. Global inflation - the rate at which prices rise - has come down from its peaks last year but continues to squeeze household budgets and raise operational costs for many businesses. Meanwhile, elevated energy costs have also meant rising business costs are passed on to consumers either in the form of less product for the same price, or a more expensive product overall. “As a result of this difficult environment, we have had to make the decision to reduce the weight of some of our products, so that we can keep them competitive, and not compromise on the great taste and quality that our fans enjoy,” the spokesperson added. Earlier this year, Which? revealed other examples of Shrinkflation in British supermarkets. In January, the following items were said to shrink in size but cost the same or go up in price: Which? said its research showed shoppers are often left paying more for less. ",BBC,17/05/2024,"['The number of Ritz crackers per box has been reduced by up to 30% but the price has remained the same.', 'The size difference was first highlighted by The Grocer and confirmed by Mondelez, which owns the Ritz brand.', 'Mondelez is being accused of ""shrinkflation"", where prices are kept the same but content reduced.', 'Shelf prices in popular British supermarkets have remained the same with a box costing £1.25 in Tesco and Asda and £1.50 in Morrisons.', 'The 200g packs of Original and Cheese crackers have now been replaced by packs weighing 150g and 140g. A spokesperson for Mondelez International confirmed the size change to the BBC. “', 'We understand the economic pressures that consumers continue to face and any changes to our product sizes is a last resort for our business,"" they said, adding that the food producer is experiencing ""significantly higher input costs"" across its supply chain as ingredients cost far more than they had previously.', 'It added that costs for energy, packaging and transport remain high.', 'Global inflation - the rate at which prices rise - has come down from its peaks last year but continues to squeeze household budgets and raise operational costs for many businesses.', 'Meanwhile, elevated energy costs have also meant rising business costs are passed on to consumers either in the form of less product for the same price, or a more expensive product overall. “', 'As a result of this difficult environment, we have had to make the decision to reduce the weight of some of our products, so that we can keep them competitive, and not compromise on the great taste and quality that our fans enjoy,” the spokesperson added.', 'Earlier this year, Which?', 'revealed other examples of Shrinkflation in British supermarkets.', 'In January, the following items were said to shrink in size but cost the same or go up in price: Which?', 'said its research showed shoppers are often left paying more for less.']",0.1151024160400792,"As a result of this difficult environment, we have had to make the decision to reduce the weight of some of our products, so that we can keep them competitive, and not compromise on the great taste and quality that our fans enjoy,” the spokesperson added.","We understand the economic pressures that consumers continue to face and any changes to our product sizes is a last resort for our business,"" they said, adding that the food producer is experiencing ""significantly higher input costs"" across its supply chain as ingredients cost far more than they had previously.",-0.3315910796324412,The number of Ritz crackers per box has been reduced by up to 30% but the price has remained the same.,Global inflation - the rate at which prices rise - has come down from its peaks last year but continues to squeeze household budgets and raise operational costs for many businesses.,2024-05-20 "Walmart surges to all-time high as earnings beat on high-income shopper, e-commerce gains",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/walmart-wmt-q1-2025-earnings-.html,2024-05-16T20:04:51+0000,"In this articleWalmart on Thursday topped quarterly earnings and revenue expectations, as the discounter made significant e-commerce gains, drove profits with newer businesses like advertising and won over more high-income shoppers.The big-box retailer said it now expects to hit the high end or slightly top its previous full-year guidance. Walmart had expected net sales growth of 3% to 4% and adjusted earnings per share of between $2.23 and $2.37.Shares of the company hit an all-time high Thursday and closed about 7% higher.In an interview with CNBC, Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey said one of the factors boosting Walmart's grocery business is the widening gap between the price of cooking at home and buying food at fast-food chains or restaurants.Plus, he added, shoppers appreciate the convenience that Walmart offers. For the first time, its delivery business surpassed its store pickup in terms of volume, Rainey said.""We've got customers that are coming to us more frequently than they have before and newer customers that we haven't traditionally had, and they're coming into a Walmart whether it's a virtual store online, or whether it's one of our physical stores,"" Rainey said.Here's what the discounter reported for the fiscal first quarter compared with what Wall Street expected, according to a survey of analysts by LSEG:Walmart's net income jumped to $5.10 billion, or 63 cents per share, in the three-month period that ended April 30, compared with $1.67 billion, or 21 cents per share, in the year-ago period.Revenue climbed 6% from $152.30 billion in the year-ago quarter. That increase includes a benefit of roughly 1% from an additional selling day in the period. As the nation's largest retailer and private employer, Walmart is often viewed as a bellwether for the U.S. economy. Yet it has generally fared better during an inflationary period than other retailers because it sells staples like groceries and has a value-oriented reputation.Same-store sales for Walmart U.S. climbed by 3.8%, excluding fuel. The industry metric includes sales from stores and clubs open for at least a year. At Sam's Club, same-store sales rose 4.4% year over year, excluding fuel.E-commerce sales shot up by 22% year over year for Walmart U.S., fueled by store pickup and delivery of online orders, as well as the company's growing third-party marketplace. Walmart's customers in the U.S. made more visits to its stores and website in the quarter, but spent roughly the same as in the year-ago period. Transactions rose 3.8% and average ticket was flat compared with the year-ago quarter.This week brought promising news for Walmart and other retailers: Inflation eased in April, according to the Labor Department data released Wednesday. The consumer price index was up 3.4% year over year. The closely watched number tracks how much goods and services cost at the cash register.Walmart saw some signs of easing, too. On the company's earnings call, CEO Doug McMillon said inflation in the U.S. was only up 0.4% for the quarter, with mid-single digit deflation on general merchandise and low-single digit inflation in food.He said the company has increased ""rollbacks,"" price reductions on specific items that it typically advertises on its website or with signs in its stores.Even so, the discounter has noticed the impact of inflation, as its shoppers have been selective with purchases. Rainey said customers' ""wallets are still stretched."" He said shoppers have bought less general merchandise, such as home goods and electronics, as they prioritize spending on food and health-related items, a trend that the company has seen for the past several quarters.Still, ""even the low-income consumer seems to be holding in there pretty well,"" Rainey said. He added that sales even in general merchandise categories improved year over year.Walmart had a weaker sales month in April, which mirrored retail sales numbers released by the Commerce Department on Wednesday, but that was offset by sales trends in the other months of the quarter. Rainey chalked up a weaker April to Easter shifting into March, along with cooler and rainier weather.He said sales have picked up again in May and looked similar to the average of the fiscal first quarter.On the earnings call, McMillon emphasized Walmart's expansion of its online business and success getting more customers to buy other items besides groceries. Groceries drive most of Walmart's business — accounting for nearly 60% of the company's U.S. sales in the most recent full fiscal year — but aren't as profitable as selling items like clothing or makeup.""We punched below our weight on general merchandise, specifically in apparel and home, for a really long time, maybe forever, and I think the progress we're seeing right now is driven by the in-store remodels and e-commerce,"" McMillon said.As Walmart tries to appeal to younger and more affluent households, it recently launched a new private-label grocery brand, which includes bolder flavors, plant-based items and more. It is also upgrading and modernizing more than 1,400 stores across the country. The renovated stores showcase some of the retailer's newer and more fashion-forward brands like Love & Sports, an activewear brand developed with fashion designer Michelle Smith and SoulCycle instructor Stacey Griffith, and a kitchen and home decor line called Beautiful, which was developed with Drew Barrymore.Walmart has looked beyond retail to drive profits higher and fend off rivals like Amazon.Those newer businesses like advertising and its subscription-based membership program, Walmart+, lifted its profit during the quarter and contributed to its operating income growth outpacing its sales growth. The company's global advertising business grew 24% during the quarter, including 26% growth for the segment in the U.S.The company's third-party marketplace has also been a significant driver of the business. Like Amazon, Walmart has expanded its online business by welcoming sellers onto its website, and then made more money by offering advertisement and fulfillment services to those sellers.In the U.S., marketplace sellers increased 36% in the quarter and the marketplace now carries more than 420 different items, McMillon said on an earnings call. In Mexico, the number of marketplace sellers grew by more than 50% with the total item count up nearly 80%.Rainey told CNBC that a third of Walmart's year-over-year operating income gains came from those newer businesses.Walmart has been slashing spending in some areas and investing heavily in others. Earlier this week, the company said it would lay off and relocate hundreds of its corporate employees, including the transfer of many to its headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas. That move came on the heels of the retailer shuttering its Walmart health clinics, a network of doctor and dentist offices that had opened next to its stores.On the other hand, the big-box retailer has poured money into other efforts. As it chases advertising dollars, Walmart announced in February that it will acquire smart TV maker Vizio in a $2.3 billion deal.Rainey said Walmart's announcement this week, which will relocate hundreds of people who currently work from their homes or in offices in Dallas, Toronto and Atlanta, is about shifting away from remote work, not about cost cuts. The move also included layoffs. Walmart has not announced a five-day-a-week office policy, but has said it wants employees to work from the office the majority of the time.""We just feel strongly in the benefit of working together,"" he said. ""One of our competitive advantages is our culture — and that's fostered by being together.""Shares of Walmart closed Thursday at $64, bringing the company's market cap to $515.83 billion. As of Thursday's close, the company's stock is up about 22% so far this year, surpassing the roughly 11% gains of the S&P 500 during the same period.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"['In this articleWalmart on Thursday topped quarterly earnings and revenue expectations, as the discounter made significant e-commerce gains, drove profits with newer businesses like advertising and won over more high-income shoppers.', 'The big-box retailer said it now expects to hit the high end or slightly top its previous full-year guidance.', 'Walmart had expected net sales growth of 3% to 4% and adjusted earnings per share of between $2.23 and $2.37.Shares of the company hit an all-time high Thursday and closed about 7% higher.', ""In an interview with CNBC, Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey said one of the factors boosting Walmart's grocery business is the widening gap between the price of cooking at home and buying food at fast-food chains or restaurants."", 'Plus, he added, shoppers appreciate the convenience that Walmart offers.', 'For the first time, its delivery business surpassed its store pickup in terms of volume, Rainey said.', '""We\'ve got customers that are coming to us more frequently than they have before and newer customers that we haven\'t traditionally had, and they\'re coming into a Walmart whether it\'s a virtual store online, or whether it\'s one of our physical stores,"" Rainey said.', ""Here's what the discounter reported for the fiscal first quarter compared with what Wall Street expected, according to a survey of analysts by LSEG:Walmart's net income jumped to $5.10 billion, or 63 cents per share, in the three-month period that ended April 30, compared with $1.67 billion, or 21 cents per share, in the year-ago period."", 'Revenue climbed 6% from $152.30 billion in the year-ago quarter.', 'That increase includes a benefit of roughly 1% from an additional selling day in the period.', ""As the nation's largest retailer and private employer, Walmart is often viewed as a bellwether for the U.S. economy."", 'Yet it has generally fared better during an inflationary period than other retailers because it sells staples like groceries and has a value-oriented reputation.', 'Same-store sales for Walmart U.S. climbed by 3.8%, excluding fuel.', 'The industry metric includes sales from stores and clubs open for at least a year.', ""At Sam's Club, same-store sales rose 4.4% year over year, excluding fuel."", ""E-commerce sales shot up by 22% year over year for Walmart U.S., fueled by store pickup and delivery of online orders, as well as the company's growing third-party marketplace."", ""Walmart's customers in the U.S. made more visits to its stores and website in the quarter, but spent roughly the same as in the year-ago period."", 'Transactions rose 3.8% and average ticket was flat compared with the year-ago quarter.', 'This week brought promising news for Walmart and other retailers: Inflation eased in April, according to the Labor Department data released Wednesday.', 'The consumer price index was up 3.4% year over year.', 'The closely watched number tracks how much goods and services cost at the cash register.', 'Walmart saw some signs of easing, too.', ""On the company's earnings call, CEO Doug McMillon said inflation in the U.S. was only up 0.4% for the quarter, with mid-single digit deflation on general merchandise and low-single digit inflation in food."", 'He said the company has increased ""rollbacks,"" price reductions on specific items that it typically advertises on its website or with signs in its stores.', 'Even so, the discounter has noticed the impact of inflation, as its shoppers have been selective with purchases.', 'Rainey said customers\' ""wallets are still stretched.""', 'He said shoppers have bought less general merchandise, such as home goods and electronics, as they prioritize spending on food and health-related items, a trend that the company has seen for the past several quarters.', 'Still, ""even the low-income consumer seems to be holding in there pretty well,"" Rainey said.', 'He added that sales even in general merchandise categories improved year over year.', 'Walmart had a weaker sales month in April, which mirrored retail sales numbers released by the Commerce Department on Wednesday, but that was offset by sales trends in the other months of the quarter.', 'Rainey chalked up a weaker April to Easter shifting into March, along with cooler and rainier weather.', 'He said sales have picked up again in May and looked similar to the average of the fiscal first quarter.', ""On the earnings call, McMillon emphasized Walmart's expansion of its online business and success getting more customers to buy other items besides groceries."", ""Groceries drive most of Walmart's business — accounting for nearly 60% of the company's U.S. sales in the most recent full fiscal year — but aren't as profitable as selling items like clothing or makeup."", '""We punched below our weight on general merchandise, specifically in apparel and home, for a really long time, maybe forever, and I think the progress we\'re seeing right now is driven by the in-store remodels and e-commerce,"" McMillon said.', 'As Walmart tries to appeal to younger and more affluent households, it recently launched a new private-label grocery brand, which includes bolder flavors, plant-based items and more.', 'It is also upgrading and modernizing more than 1,400 stores across the country.', ""The renovated stores showcase some of the retailer's newer and more fashion-forward brands like Love & Sports, an activewear brand developed with fashion designerMichelle Smith and SoulCycle instructor Stacey Griffith, and a kitchen and home decor line called Beautiful, which was developed with Drew Barrymore."", 'Walmart has looked beyond retail to drive profits higher and fend off rivals like Amazon.', 'Those newer businesses like advertising and its subscription-based membership program, Walmart+, lifted its profit during the quarter and contributed to its operating income growth outpacing its sales growth.', ""The company's global advertising business grew 24% during the quarter, including 26% growth for the segment in the U.S.The company's third-party marketplace has also been a significant driver of the business."", 'Like Amazon, Walmart has expanded its online business by welcoming sellers onto its website, and then made more money by offering advertisement and fulfillment services to those sellers.', 'In the U.S., marketplace sellers increased 36% in the quarter and the marketplace now carries more than 420 different items, McMillon said on an earnings call.', ""In Mexico, the number of marketplace sellers grew by more than 50% with the total item count up nearly 80%.Rainey told CNBC that a third of Walmart's year-over-year operating income gains came from those newer businesses."", 'Walmart has been slashing spending in some areas and investing heavily in others.', 'Earlier this week, the company said it would lay off and relocate hundreds of its corporate employees, including the transfer of many to its headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas.', 'That move came on the heels of the retailer shuttering its Walmart health clinics, a network of doctor and dentist offices that had opened next to its stores.', 'On the other hand, the big-box retailer has poured money into other efforts.', 'As it chases advertising dollars, Walmart announced in February that it will acquire smart TV maker Vizio in a $2.3 billion deal.', ""Rainey said Walmart's announcement this week, which will relocate hundreds of people who currently work from their homes or in offices in Dallas, Toronto and Atlanta, is about shifting away from remote work, not about cost cuts."", 'The move also included layoffs.', 'Walmart has not announced a five-day-a-week office policy, but has said it wants employees to work from the office the majority of the time.', '""We just feel strongly in the benefit of working together,"" he said. ""', ""One of our competitive advantages is our culture — and that's fostered by being together."", '""Shares of Walmart closed Thursday at $64, bringing the company\'s market cap to $515.83 billion.', ""As of Thursday's close, the company's stock is up about 22% so far this year, surpassing the roughly 11% gains of the S&P 500 during the same period.""]",0.2787178960899139,"In this articleWalmart on Thursday topped quarterly earnings and revenue expectations, as the discounter made significant e-commerce gains, drove profits with newer businesses like advertising and won over more high-income shoppers.","Rainey chalked up a weaker April to Easter shifting into March, along with cooler and rainier weather.",0.6785912852395665,The consumer price index was up 3.4% year over year.,"Walmart had a weaker sales month in April, which mirrored retail sales numbers released by the Commerce Department on Wednesday, but that was offset by sales trends in the other months of the quarter.",2024-05-20 JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon signals retirement is closer than ever,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/20/jpmorgan-ceo-jamie-dimon-retirement-approaching.html,2024-05-20T18:54:31+0000,"In this articleJamie Dimon's days as CEO of JPMorgan Chase are numbered — though its unclear by how much.In a response to a question Monday about the bank's succession planning, Dimon indicated that his expected tenure is less than five more years. That's a key change from Dimon's previous responses to succession questions, in which his standard answer had been that retirement was perpetually five years away.""The timetable isn't five years, anymore,"" Dimon said at the New York-based bank's annual investor meeting.The ambiguity of Dimon's plans has made succession timing at JPMorgan one of the persistent questions for the bank's investors and analysts. Over nearly two decades, Dimon, 68, has made his lender the largest in America by assets, market capitalization and a number of other measures.Still, Dimon added Monday that he still has ""the energy that I've always had"" in managing the sprawling company.The decision of when he moves on will ultimately be up to JPMorgan's board, Dimon said, and he exhorted investors and analysts to examine the executives who could take his place.Atop the short list of candidates is Marianne Lake, CEO of JPMorgan's consumer bank, and Jennifer Piepszak, who co-leads its commercial and investment bank; the executives were given their latest assignments in January.""We're on the way, we're moving people around,"" Dimon said.Even when he steps down as CEO, however, it's likely he will stay on as the bank's chairman, JPMorgan has said.Shares of the bank dropped 3.6%.",CNBC,20/05/2024,"[""In this articleJamie Dimon's days as CEO of JPMorgan Chase are numbered — though its unclear by how much."", ""In a response to a question Monday about the bank's succession planning, Dimon indicated that his expected tenure is less than five more years."", ""That's a key change from Dimon's previous responses to succession questions, in which his standard answer had been that retirement was perpetually five years away."", '""The timetable isn\'t five years, anymore,"" Dimon said at the New York-based bank\'s annual investor meeting.', ""The ambiguity of Dimon's plans has made succession timing at JPMorgan one of the persistent questions for the bank's investors and analysts."", 'Over nearly two decades, Dimon, 68, has made his lender the largest in America by assets, market capitalization and a number of other measures.', 'Still, Dimon added Monday that he still has ""the energy that I\'ve always had"" in managing the sprawling company.', ""The decision of when he moves on will ultimately be up to JPMorgan's board, Dimon said, and he exhorted investors and analysts to examine the executives who could take his place."", ""Atop the short list of candidates is Marianne Lake, CEO of JPMorgan's consumer bank, and Jennifer Piepszak, who co-leads its commercial and investment bank; the executives were given their latest assignments in January."", '""We\'re on the way, we\'re moving people around,"" Dimon said.', ""Even when he steps down as CEO, however, it's likely he will stay on as the bank's chairman, JPMorgan has said."", 'Shares of the bank dropped 3.6%.']",0.098003095366973,Shares of the bank dropped 3.6%.,In this articleJamie Dimon's days as CEO of JPMorgan Chase are numbered — though its unclear by how much.,-0.9716316163539886,,Shares of the bank dropped 3.6%.,2024-05-20 Apple announces its annual developers conference is set for June 10,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/tech/apple-annual-developers-conference-june-10/index.html," Updated 2:20 PM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","Apple announced its annual Worldwide Developer Conference will kick off on June 10, when the company is expected to show off its latest AI advancements. The conference, which is widely anticipated each year as a major showcase for Apple software news, will run Monday, June 10 through Friday, June 14. Although last year’s WWDC focused on the unveiling of the Vision Pro mixed reality headset, which launched in stores in February, this year is expected to turn to Apple’s AI efforts. The company is reportedly interested in licensing and building Google’s Gemini AI engine, which includes chatbots and other AI tools, into upcoming iPhones and its iOS 18 features. As more tech companies pour billions of dollars into the development and rollout of artificial intelligence, Apple has largely been left out of the conversation, with many other tech companies making big strides in the space. A partnership with Google would catapult Apple into the growing AI arms race. Apple researchers also recently said they’ve developed a family of multimodal models — which refers to an AI system that can interpret and generate different types of data, such as text and images at the same time — called MM1. A report from those researchers said those new methods boast “superior abilities” and can offer advanced reasoning and in-context learning to respond to text and images. In a press release on Tuesday, the company said WWDC 2024 will also share software updates coming to the iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, Apple TV and Vision Pro headset.",CNN,26/03/2024,"['Apple announced its annual Worldwide Developer Conference will kick off on June 10, when the company is expected to show off its latest AI advancements.', 'The conference, which is widely anticipated each year as a major showcase for Apple software news, will run Monday, June 10 through Friday, June 14.', 'Although last year’s WWDC focused on the unveiling of the Vision Pro mixed reality headset, which launched in stores in February, this year is expected to turn to Apple’s AI efforts.', 'The company is reportedly interested in licensing and building Google’s Gemini AI engine, which includes chatbots and other AI tools, into upcoming iPhones and its iOS 18 features.', 'As more tech companies pour billions of dollars into the development and rollout of artificial intelligence, Apple has largely been left out of the conversation, with many other tech companies making big strides in the space.', 'A partnership with Google would catapult Apple into the growing AI arms race.', 'Apple researchers also recently said they’ve developed a family of multimodal models — which refers to an AI system that can interpret and generate different types of data, such as text and images at the same time — called MM1.', 'A report from those researchers said those new methods boast “superior abilities” and can offer advanced reasoning and in-context learning to respond to text and images.', 'In a press release on Tuesday, the company said WWDC 2024 will also share software updates coming to the iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, Apple TV and Vision Pro headset.']",0.3259092919755588,A report from those researchers said those new methods boast “superior abilities” and can offer advanced reasoning and in-context learning to respond to text and images.,,0.9975101351737976,A report from those researchers said those new methods boast “superior abilities” and can offer advanced reasoning and in-context learning to respond to text and images.,,2024-05-20 Marks and Spencer website and app hit by technical issue,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cv22e5vx5djo,2024-05-18T16:43:01.215Z,"Customers were unable to use Marks and Spencer's website and app for several hours on Saturday after it was hit by a technical issue. The website and app were back up and running by 18:15 BST. During the outage, users saw an error message on the homepage and could not navigate to any part of the website. An M&S spokeswoman told the BBC a problem with a third party provider had been ""temporarily affecting access"". The company added it was ""sorry to customers for the inconvenience caused"". Problems with access to the website and app were first reported on X, formerly Twitter, from around lunchtime on Saturday. The website came back online after 17:00 BST, only to go back to the original error message a short time later, but it was up and running again before 18:00 BST. The app was still showing a notice about a technical glitch for a short while after but is now operating normally. Its notice read: ""Sorry you can't shop through the app right now. ""We're busy making some planned changes, but will be back soon."" Some customers complained on social media that they had been unable to use their Sparks card - the company's loyalty scheme - as they did not have a physical card and claimed they had lost out on savings. In March, supermarket Sainsbury's was also hit with technical issues. It was unable to carry out most of its online grocery orders after an overnight update caused contactless payments to fail. ",BBC,18/05/2024,"[""Customers were unable to use Marks and Spencer's website and app for several hours on Saturday after it was hit by a technical issue."", 'The website and app were back up and running by 18:15 BST.', 'During the outage, users saw an error message on the homepage and could not navigate to any part of the website.', 'An M&S spokeswoman told the BBC a problem with a third party provider had been ""temporarily affecting access"".', 'The company added it was ""sorry to customers for the inconvenience caused"".', 'Problems with access to the website and app were first reported on X, formerly Twitter, from around lunchtime on Saturday.', 'The website came back online after 17:00 BST, only to go back to the original error message a short time later, but it was up and running again before 18:00 BST.', 'The app was still showing a notice about a technical glitch for a short while after but is now operating normally.', 'Its notice read: ""Sorry you can\'t shop through the app right now. ""', 'We\'re busy making some planned changes, but will be back soon.""', ""Some customers complained on social media that they had been unable to use their Sparks card - the company's loyalty scheme - as they did not have a physical card and claimed they had lost out on savings."", ""In March, supermarket Sainsbury's was also hit with technical issues."", 'It was unable to carry out most of its online grocery orders after an overnight update caused contactless payments to fail.']",-0.1557287446900505,,It was unable to carry out most of its online grocery orders after an overnight update caused contactless payments to fail.,-0.9572318366595676,,Some customers complained on social media that they had been unable to use their Sparks card - the company's loyalty scheme - as they did not have a physical card and claimed they had lost out on savings.,2024-05-20 China launches its own anti-dumping probe following Biden’s monster tariffs,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/business/china-anti-dumping-us-eu-intl-hnk/index.html," Published 1:45 AM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","China has hinted at possible tit-for-tat action against trade barriers imposed by the United States last week, as relations between the two economic superpowers become increasingly fraught. On Sunday, China’s Ministry of Commerce said it was launching an anti-dumping probe into polyoxymethylene or POM copolymers, a thermoplastic used in various industries ranging from auto parts to electronics, imported from the US, the European Union, Taiwan and Japan. Thermoplastics are malleable when heated but become fixed in a solid shape when cooled, and can partially replace metals such as copper and zinc. The investigation should take a year to complete, but may be extended by another six months, the ministry added. The announcement comes days after President Joe Biden said that tariffs on $18 billion worth of imports of Chinese electric vehicles (EVs) and an array of other products would soar over the next two years. EVs imported from China will see their tariffs nearly quadruple from 27.5% to 100%, a policy lever meant to challenge Beijing’s practice of encouraging aggressively low pricing by domestic EV manufacturers while levying a 40% tariff on US car imports. The White House said the measures were designed to protect American workers and businesses in the face of China’s unfair trade practices, including “flooding global markets with artificially low-priced exports.” In response, China has vowed to take “all necessary actions to protect its legitimate rights.” The EU is also investigating state support for Chinese EV makers and, if it finds that their prices are artificially low, it will announce extra import duties by early July.",CNN,20/05/2024,"['China has hinted at possible tit-for-tat action against trade barriers imposed by the United States last week, as relations between the two economic superpowers become increasingly fraught.', 'On Sunday, China’s Ministry of Commerce said it was launching an anti-dumping probe into polyoxymethylene or POM copolymers, a thermoplastic used in various industries ranging from auto parts to electronics, imported from the US, the European Union, Taiwan and Japan.', 'Thermoplastics are malleable when heated but become fixed in a solid shape when cooled, and can partially replace metals such as copper and zinc.', 'The investigation should take a year to complete, but may be extended by another six months, the ministry added.', 'The announcement comes days after President Joe Biden said that tariffs on $18 billion worth of imports of Chinese electric vehicles (EVs) and an array of other products would soar over the next two years.', 'EVs imported from China will see their tariffs nearly quadruple from 27.5% to 100%, a policy lever meant to challenge Beijing’s practice of encouraging aggressively low pricing by domestic EV manufacturers while levying a 40% tariff on US car imports.', 'The White House said the measures were designed to protect American workers and businesses in the face of China’s unfair trade practices, including “flooding global markets with artificially low-priced exports.”', 'In response, China has vowed to take “all necessary actions to protect its legitimate rights.”', 'The EU is also investigating state support for Chinese EV makers and, if it finds that their prices are artificially low, it will announce extra import duties by early July.']",0.0540893893600919,"In response, China has vowed to take “all necessary actions to protect its legitimate rights.”","On Sunday, China’s Ministry of Commerce said it was launching an anti-dumping probe into polyoxymethylene or POM copolymers, a thermoplastic used in various industries ranging from auto parts to electronics, imported from the US, the European Union, Taiwan and Japan.",-0.5051757097244263,"EVs imported from China will see their tariffs nearly quadruple from 27.5% to 100%, a policy lever meant to challenge Beijing’s practice of encouraging aggressively low pricing by domestic EV manufacturers while levying a 40% tariff on US car imports.",The announcement comes days after President Joe Biden said that tariffs on $18 billion worth of imports of Chinese electric vehicles (EVs) and an array of other products would soar over the next two years.,2024-05-20 Biden's EV tariffs may not be enough to stave off the threat of Chinese vehicles in the U.S.,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/15/china-biden-ev-tariffs-may-not-be-enough-to-stave-off-growing-threat.html,2024-05-15T19:46:13+0000,"DETROIT — President Joe Biden's plan to quadruple tariffs on China-made electric vehicles is unlikely to stave off the threat of more Chinese cars on the auto sales market in the U.S.The 100% tariff announced Tuesday, up from a current import tax of about 25%, covers EVs imported from China but could still leave room for the often-cheap Chinese models to undercut domestic prices and leaves loopholes for imports made by Chinese automakers in other countries, like neighboring Mexico. It also does nothing to address current or future gas-powered vehicles imported from the Communist country to the U.S.Automotive and trade experts say the increased tariffs are a near-term protectionism act that may delay but won't stop Chinese automakers from coming to the U.S. with EVs.""They're going to be here. It's inevitable. It's just a matter of time,"" said Dan Hearsch, Americas co-leader of automotive and industrial practice at consulting firm AlixPartners. ""Western automakers, Western suppliers really ought to be upping their game and preparing to take this on or play with them. It's one or the other.""The EV tariffs, including other increases regarding battery materials, were among new tariff rates on $18 billion worth of Chinese imports.For decades, Chinese auto companies have said they will begin selling vehicles in the U.S. under their own brands, but none have succeeded.The quality of Chinese automakers' vehicles has gotten significantly better in recent years, as Beijing has helped by subsidizing their operations to grow domestic production. The increase in domestic automakers has led to a rapid deterioration of market share in the country for global automakers such as General Motors.Global players have made more inroads in the U.S. market in recent years. The so-called Big Three U.S. automakers — GM, Ford Motor and Chrysler, now owned by Stellantis — have watched their market share in the country deteriorate from 75% in 1984 to about 40% in 2023, according to industry data.GM and others have found it hard to compete against budget and mainstream Chinese vehicles, including EVs. For example, a small EV from Warren Buffett-backed BYD called the Seagull starts at around $10,000 and reportedly banks a profit for the increasingly influential Chinese automaker.Though the Seagull isn't yet sold on U.S. soil, BYD is expanding its vehicles globally, and some believe it's only a matter of time before more China-made vehicles arrive in the U.S.Even with the new 100% tariff, its pricing would likely be in line with or better than many EVs currently on sale in the U.S.""Ultimately, we think protectionism from the West could remain a near-term overhang for Chinese EV/parts makers aiming for rapid global expansion, but we think it is unlikely to halt China's EV push in the long run,"" Morgan Stanley analyst Tim Hsiao said in an investor note this week.Though some automakers currently import gas-powered vehicles from China into the U.S., the numbers are small. Wall Street analysts, citing the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, report fewer than 75,000 vehicles were imported into the U.S. last year.Vehicles made in China and currently sold in the U.S. include GM's gas-powered Buick Envision, Ford's Lincoln Nautilus and two all-electric vehicles from Geely-owned Volvo and its spinoff EV startup Polestar.Polestar, with a small lineup of vehicles, is notably reliant on its Chinese imports. The company, in a statement, said it is ""currently evaluating the announcement of tariff increases from the Biden Administration,"" saying it believes ""free trade is essential to speed up the transition to more sustainable mobility through increased EV adoption.""Biden's focus on China-made EVs — and the exclusion of gas-powered vehicles in the higher levies — fits with the White House's clean energy agenda, which has emphasized electric vehicle production and adoption as well as enhanced U.S. charging infrastructure.""EVs are where we're focused in terms of placing tariffs, because that's where we've made hundreds of billions of dollars of public investments. We've made those investments to build resilience in our clean technology supply chains. And so that's our focus here,"" a senior administration official told reporters this week.It's possible U.S. officials are taking a warning sign from Europe, where Chinese automakers have quickly flooded markets with gas-saving EVs and undercut domestic automakers.Chinese companies accounted for 8% of Europe's all-electric vehicle sales as of September and could increase their share to 15% by 2025, the European Union said in October 2023. The EU believes Chinese EVs are undercutting the prices of local models by about 20%.The Biden administration's new EV tariffs could have a ripple effect on other countries, including in Europe, if they're successful in stemming Chinese exports, according to Coco Zhang, vice president of ESG research at ING Group.She said similar tariffs elsewhere could force Chinese companies to move more quickly to establish local production operations or joint ventures with other companies in an attempt to lower export costs.""From China's perspective, if there can be supply or other sorts of partnerships, they can still find their way going into the U.S. market,"" Zhang said.Such moves would be reminiscent of how Japanese automakers such as Toyota Motor and Nissan Motor as well as South Korea's Hyundai Motor, including Kia Motors, entered the U.S. market in recent decades.– CNBC's Rebecca Picciotto and Michael Bloom contributed to this report.",CNBC,15/05/2024,"[""DETROIT — President Joe Biden's plan to quadruple tariffs on China-made electric vehicles is unlikely to stave off the threat of more Chinese cars on the auto sales market in the U.S.The 100% tariff announced Tuesday, up from a current import tax of about 25%, covers EVs imported from China but could still leave room for the often-cheap Chinese models to undercut domestic prices and leaves loopholes for imports made by Chinese automakers in other countries, like neighboring Mexico."", ""It also does nothing to address current or future gas-powered vehicles imported from the Communist country to the U.S.Automotive and trade experts say the increased tariffs are a near-term protectionism act that may delay but won't stop Chinese automakers from coming to the U.S. with EVs."", '""They\'re going to be here.', ""It's inevitable."", 'It\'s just a matter of time,"" said Dan Hearsch, Americas co-leader of automotive and industrial practice at consulting firm AlixPartners. ""', 'Western automakers, Western suppliers really ought to be upping their game and preparing to take this on or play with them.', ""It's one or the other."", '""The EV tariffs, including other increases regarding battery materials, were among new tariff rates on $18 billion worth of Chinese imports.', 'For decades, Chinese auto companies have said they will begin selling vehicles in the U.S. under their own brands, but none have succeeded.', ""The quality of Chinese automakers' vehicles has gotten significantly better in recent years, as Beijing has helped by subsidizing their operations to grow domestic production."", 'The increase in domestic automakers has led to a rapid deterioration of market share in the country for global automakers such as General Motors.', 'Global players have made more inroads in the U.S. market in recent years.', 'The so-called Big Three U.S. automakers — GM, FordMotor and Chrysler, now owned byStellantis— have watched their market share in the country deteriorate from 75% in 1984 to about 40% in 2023, according to industry data.', 'GM and others have found it hard to compete against budget and mainstream Chinese vehicles, including EVs.', 'For example, a small EV from Warren Buffett-backed BYD called the Seagull starts at around $10,000 and reportedly banks a profit for the increasingly influential Chinese automaker.', 'Though the Seagull isn\'t yet sold on U.S. soil, BYD is expanding its vehicles globally, and some believe it\'s only a matter of time before more China-made vehicles arrive in the U.S.Even with the new 100% tariff, its pricing would likely be in line with or better than many EVs currently on sale in the U.S.""Ultimately, we think protectionism from the West could remain a near-term overhang for Chinese EV/parts makers aiming for rapid global expansion, but we think it is unlikely to halt China\'s EV push in the long run,"" Morgan Stanley analyst Tim Hsiao said in an investor note this week.', 'Though some automakers currently import gas-powered vehicles from China into the U.S., the numbers are small.', 'Wall Street analysts, citing the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, report fewer than 75,000 vehicles were imported into the U.S. last year.', ""Vehicles made in China and currently sold in the U.S. include GM's gas-powered Buick Envision, Ford's Lincoln Nautilus and two all-electric vehicles from Geely-owned Volvo and its spinoff EV startup Polestar."", 'Polestar, with a small lineup of vehicles, is notably reliant on its Chinese imports.', 'The company, in a statement, said it is ""currently evaluating the announcement of tariff increases from the Biden Administration,"" saying it believes ""free trade is essential to speed up the transition to more sustainable mobility through increased EV adoption.', '""Biden\'s focus on China-made EVs — and the exclusion of gas-powered vehicles in the higher levies — fits with the White House\'s clean energy agenda, which has emphasized electric vehicle production and adoption as well as enhanced U.S. charging infrastructure.', '""EVs are where we\'re focused in terms of placing tariffs, because that\'s where we\'ve made hundreds of billions of dollars of public investments.', ""We've made those investments to build resilience in our clean technology supply chains."", 'And so that\'s our focus here,"" a senior administration official told reporters this week.', ""It's possible U.S. officials are taking a warning sign from Europe, where Chinese automakers have quickly flooded markets with gas-saving EVs and undercut domestic automakers."", ""Chinese companies accounted for 8% of Europe's all-electric vehicle sales as of September and could increase their share to 15% by 2025, the European Union said in October 2023."", ""The EU believes Chinese EVs are undercutting the prices of local models by about 20%.The Biden administration's new EV tariffs could have a ripple effect on other countries, including in Europe, if they're successful in stemming Chinese exports, according to Coco Zhang, vice president of ESG research at ING Group."", 'She said similar tariffs elsewhere could force Chinese companies to move more quickly to establish local production operations or joint ventures with other companies in an attempt to lower export costs.', '""From China\'s perspective, if there can be supply or other sorts of partnerships, they can still find their way going into the U.S. market,"" Zhang said.', ""Such moves would be reminiscent of how Japanese automakers such as Toyota Motor and Nissan Motor as well as South Korea's Hyundai Motor, including Kia Motors, entered the U.S. market in recent decades.–"", ""CNBC's Rebecca Picciotto and Michael Bloom contributed to this report.""]",0.1305594935970119,"For example, a small EV from Warren Buffett-backed BYD called the Seagull starts at around $10,000 and reportedly banks a profit for the increasingly influential Chinese automaker.","Such moves would be reminiscent of how Japanese automakers such as Toyota Motor and Nissan Motor as well as South Korea's Hyundai Motor, including Kia Motors, entered the U.S. market in recent decades.–",0.0812817851702372,"The quality of Chinese automakers' vehicles has gotten significantly better in recent years, as Beijing has helped by subsidizing their operations to grow domestic production.",The increase in domestic automakers has led to a rapid deterioration of market share in the country for global automakers such as General Motors.,2024-05-20 "People on Novo Nordisk's Wegovy maintain weight loss for up to four years, study says",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/14/wegovy-patients-maintain-weight-loss-for-4-years-novo-nordisk-study.html,2024-05-14T15:16:13+0000,"In this articlePatients taking Novo Nordisk's obesity drug Wegovy maintained an average of 10% weight loss for up to four years, according to a new analysis published Tuesday from the longest clinical trial to date on the treatment.The highly popular drug also reduced the risk of heart disease regardless of a patient's weight, a second analysis on the same trial found. Both analyses were presented at the European Congress on Obesity in Venice, Italy, this week.The findings shed light on the long-term effects of Wegovy and add to growing evidence of the weekly injection's broad health benefits. That could boost Novo Nordisk's case for insurers and governments to cover the costly but effective drug.Insurance coverage is limited for Wegovy, part of a class of medications called GLP-1s. Those obesity and diabetes treatments have soared in popularity over the last year and work by mimicking a hormone produced in the gut to suppress a person's appetite. Neither Novo Nordisk or Eli Lilly, which has its own weight loss drug, have been able to produce enough supply to meet the insatiable demand for their treatments.The two analyses build on data published in November from Novo Nordisk's SELECT trial. The findings from that trial showed that Wegovy slashed the risk of heart attacks, stroke and other serious cardiovascular complications by 20% in people who have obesity or are overweight and also have cardiovascular disease.The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Wegovy for that purpose in March.The SELECT trial, which included more than 17,000 patients from over 40 countries, tested Wegovy for its cardiovascular benefits.Participants were not required to track diet and exercise because it was not an obesity study. Patients in the trial lost around 10% of their total body weight on average after 65 weeks on Wegovy, according to the first analysis published in the journal Nature.Patients continued to take the weekly drug over a period of three years and four months and sustained their weight loss for up to four years. Other research has shown that many people regain weight after stopping the drugs.The second analysis showed that patients in the trial reaped the heart benefits of Wegovy regardless of their weight when they started on the drug and regardless of how much weight they lost on it.For example, the reduced risk of serious cardiovascular events for those on Wegovy, compared with a placebo, was similar among people who lost 5% or more of their body weight, those who lost less than that or even those who gained weight.The finding suggests Wegovy helps improve a patient's heart health through methods beyond weight loss, the study authors concluded.Notably, the weight loss in the trial was less than the average 15% weight loss observed in an earlier study on Wegovy's effect on obesity.But the researchers in the first analysis noted that the previous study was designed specifically for weight loss and included structured lifestyle changes, such as diet and exercise. The population that study followed was also different from the SELECT trial.Safety results from the two analyses were consistent with the previous data from the SELECT trial. More people on Wegovy than people who got a placebo decided to stop participating in the trial because of side effects.Patients also experienced side effects consistent with other GLP-1 medications, such as nausea, diarrhea, vomiting and constipation.",CNBC,14/05/2024,"[""In this articlePatients taking Novo Nordisk's obesity drug Wegovy maintained an average of 10% weight loss for up to four years, according to a new analysis published Tuesday from the longest clinical trial to date on the treatment."", ""The highly popular drug also reduced the risk of heart disease regardless of a patient's weight, a second analysis on the same trial found."", 'Both analyses were presented at the European Congress on Obesity in Venice, Italy, this week.', ""The findings shed light on the long-term effects of Wegovy and add to growing evidence of the weekly injection's broad health benefits."", ""That could boost Novo Nordisk's case for insurers and governments to cover the costly but effective drug."", 'Insurance coverage is limited for Wegovy, part of a class of medications called GLP-1s.', ""Those obesity and diabetes treatments have soared in popularity over the last year and work by mimicking a hormone produced in the gut to suppress a person's appetite."", 'Neither Novo Nordisk or Eli Lilly, which has its own weight loss drug, have been able to produce enough supply to meet the insatiable demand for their treatments.', ""The two analyses build on data published in November from Novo Nordisk's SELECT trial."", 'The findings from that trial showed that Wegovy slashed the risk of heart attacks, stroke and other serious cardiovascular complications by 20% in people who have obesity or are overweight and also have cardiovascular disease.', 'The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Wegovy for that purpose in March.', 'The SELECT trial, which included more than 17,000 patients from over 40 countries, tested Wegovy for its cardiovascular benefits.', 'Participants were not required to track diet and exercise because it was not an obesity study.', 'Patients in the trial lost around 10% of their total body weight on average after 65 weeks on Wegovy, according to the first analysis published in the journal Nature.', 'Patients continued to take the weekly drug over a period of three years and four months and sustained their weight loss for up to four years.', 'Other research has shown that many people regain weight after stopping the drugs.', 'The second analysis showed that patients in the trial reaped the heart benefits of Wegovy regardless of their weight when they started on the drug and regardless of how much weight they lost on it.', 'For example, the reduced risk of serious cardiovascular events for those on Wegovy, compared with a placebo, was similar among people who lost 5% or more of their body weight, those who lost less than that or even those who gained weight.', ""The finding suggests Wegovy helps improve a patient's heart health through methods beyond weight loss, the study authors concluded."", ""Notably, the weight loss in the trial was less than the average 15% weight loss observed in an earlier study on Wegovy's effect on obesity."", 'But the researchers in the first analysis noted that the previous study was designed specifically for weight loss and included structured lifestyle changes, such as diet and exercise.', 'The population that study followed was also different from the SELECT trial.', 'Safety results from the two analyses were consistent with the previous data from the SELECT trial.', 'More people on Wegovy than people who got a placebo decided to stop participating in the trial because of side effects.', 'Patients also experienced side effects consistent with other GLP-1 medications, such as nausea, diarrhea, vomiting and constipation.']",-0.0272232112652656,That could boost Novo Nordisk's case for insurers and governments to cover the costly but effective drug.,"The findings from that trial showed that Wegovy slashed the risk of heart attacks, stroke and other serious cardiovascular complications by 20% in people who have obesity or are overweight and also have cardiovascular disease.",0.7400435487429301,Those obesity and diabetes treatments have soared in popularity over the last year and work by mimicking a hormone produced in the gut to suppress a person's appetite.,"Patients also experienced side effects consistent with other GLP-1 medications, such as nausea, diarrhea, vomiting and constipation.",2024-05-20 Shares of Hims & Hers Health surge 30% after startup says it will offer GLP-1 injections,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/20/hims-hers-compounded-glp-1-injections.html,2024-05-20T14:54:13+0000,"In this articleDigital pharmacy startup Hims & Hers Health is introducing access to compounded GLP-1 weight loss injections, the company announced Monday.Shares of the company jumped more than 30% Monday morning.The company, which offers a range of direct-to-consumer treatments for conditions like erectile dysfunction and hair loss, launched a weight loss program in December. But GLP-1 medications — such as Ozempic and Wegovy, which have skyrocketed in popularity — were not previously offered as part of that program.Customers can access the compounded GLP-1 medications via a prescription from a licensed health-care provider on the Hims & Hers platform. Hims & Hers said it plans to make branded GLP-1 medications available to its customers once supply is consistently available.The company's oral medication kits start at $79 a month, and its compounded GLP-1 injections will start at $199 a month.Even before it added compounded GLP-1s to its portfolio, Hims & Hers said in its fourth-quarter earnings report that it expects its weight loss program to bring in more than $100 million in revenue by the end of 2025. The company plans to offer updated guidance in its next earnings report.The GLP-1 market, dominated so far by pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk, has faced supply constraints in recent months as the drugs get expanded approval from health regulators and increased health coverage.GLP-1s mimic a hormone produced in the gut to tamp down a person's appetite and regulate their blood sugar. When those medications are in shortage, certain manufacturers can prepare a compounded version if they meet U.S. Food and Drug Administration requirements.The FDA does not review the safety and efficacy of compounded products, which are custom-made alternatives to brand drugs designed to meet a specific patient's needs.In a January release, the FDA said patients should not use a compounded GLP-1 drug if an approved drug, such as Wegovy, is available.Hims & Hers CEO Andrew Dudum told CNBC that the company is ""confident"" that customers will be able to access a consistent supply of the compounded medications.Dudum said Hims & Hers has spent the last year learning about the GLP-1 supply chain and has partnered with one of the largest generic manufacturers in the country that has FDA oversight.""We have a certain degree of exclusivity with that facility that will guarantee our consumers consistent volume and supply,"" he said.",CNBC,20/05/2024,"['In this articleDigital pharmacy startup Hims & Hers Health is introducing access to compounded GLP-1 weight loss injections, the company announced Monday.', 'Shares of the company jumped more than 30% Monday morning.', 'The company, which offers a range of direct-to-consumer treatments for conditions like erectile dysfunction and hair loss, launched a weight loss program in December.', 'But GLP-1 medications — such as Ozempic and Wegovy, which have skyrocketed in popularity — were not previously offered as part of that program.', 'Customers can access the compounded GLP-1 medications via a prescription from a licensed health-care provider on the Hims & Hers platform.', 'Hims & Hers said it plans to make branded GLP-1 medications available to its customers once supply is consistently available.', ""The company's oral medication kits start at $79 a month, and its compounded GLP-1 injections will start at $199 a month."", 'Even before it added compounded GLP-1s to its portfolio, Hims & Hers said in its fourth-quarter earnings report that it expects its weight loss program to bring in more than $100 million in revenue by the end of 2025.', 'The company plans to offer updated guidance in its next earnings report.', 'The GLP-1 market, dominated so far by pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk, has faced supply constraints in recent months as the drugs get expanded approval from health regulators and increased health coverage.', ""GLP-1s mimic a hormone produced in the gut to tamp down a person's appetite and regulate their blood sugar."", 'When those medications are in shortage, certain manufacturers can prepare a compounded version if they meet U.S. Food and Drug Administration requirements.', ""The FDA does not review the safety and efficacy of compounded products, which are custom-made alternatives to brand drugs designed to meet a specific patient's needs."", 'In a January release, the FDA said patients should not use a compounded GLP-1 drug if an approved drug, such as Wegovy, is available.', 'Hims & Hers CEO Andrew Dudum told CNBC that the company is ""confident"" that customers will be able to access a consistent supply of the compounded medications.', 'Dudum said Hims & Hers has spent the last year learning about the GLP-1 supply chain and has partnered with one of the largest generic manufacturers in the country that has FDA oversight.', '""We have a certain degree of exclusivity with that facility that will guarantee our consumers consistent volume and supply,"" he said.']",0.1168976892509908,"The GLP-1 market, dominated so far by pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk, has faced supply constraints in recent months as the drugs get expanded approval from health regulators and increased health coverage.","The company, which offers a range of direct-to-consumer treatments for conditions like erectile dysfunction and hair loss, launched a weight loss program in December.",0.5991644144058228,Shares of the company jumped more than 30% Monday morning.,"The GLP-1 market, dominated so far by pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk, has faced supply constraints in recent months as the drugs get expanded approval from health regulators and increased health coverage.",2024-05-20 "Minnesota lawmakers strike minimum pay deal for Uber, Lyft drivers",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/19/business/uber-lyft-drivers-pay-minnesota/index.html," Published 1:46 PM EDT, Sun May 19, 2024 ","Minnesota government officials have struck a deal with rideshare companies Uber and Lyft to set minimum wage standards for drivers, lawmakers announced Saturday night. The agreement is the culmination of nearly a year of back and forth between Democratic state officials and the two companies, who threatened to withdraw their businesses from Minnesota over a proposed Minneapolis ordinance that would grant rideshare drivers increased worker protections. The ordinance, initially adopted in August 2023, was part of a larger effort to grant more comprehensive benefits to contract workers, who take freelance work at digital platforms like DoorDash, Instacart, Uber and Lyft. It mandated drivers be paid at least $1.40 per mile and $0.51 per minute. The rule was delayed after Lyft and Uber warned they would leave Minneapolis. State lawmakers have been focused on compromising with the companies before a July 1 deadline. Under the new agreement, the statewide minimum wage rate for rideshare drivers will be $1.28 per mile and $0.31 per minute. The rule will override the higher rate the Minneapolis City Council had initially proposed. “When you take it as a blended rate, that results in a 20% increase in pay for drivers in the state of Minnesota,” the state’s Democratic House Majority Leader Jamie Long told reporters Saturday night. The bill also includes the “strongest insurance provision for drivers in the entire country,” Long added. “It was a hard-fought compromise,” said Democratic Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy, acknowledging negotiations over pay had to toe the line between addressing the needs of employees and the need of Minnesotans who rely on rideshare services for transportation. “We applaud the tens of thousands of riders & drivers who sent close to 100,000 emails to legislators — your voices were heard. While the coming price increases may hurt riders and drivers alike, we will be able to continue to operate across the State under the compromise brokered by the Governor,” Uber’s policy director Josh Gold said in a statement. Lyft has not responded to CNN’s request for comment.",CNN,19/05/2024,"['Minnesota government officials have struck a deal with rideshare companies Uber and Lyft to set minimum wage standards for drivers, lawmakers announced Saturday night.', 'The agreement is the culmination of nearly a year of back and forth between Democratic state officials and the two companies, who threatened to withdraw their businesses from Minnesota over a proposed Minneapolis ordinance that would grant rideshare drivers increased worker protections.', 'The ordinance, initially adopted in August 2023, was part of a larger effort to grant more comprehensive benefits to contract workers, who take freelance work at digital platforms like DoorDash, Instacart, Uber and Lyft.', 'It mandated drivers be paid at least $1.40 per mile and $0.51 per minute.', 'The rule was delayed after Lyft and Uber warned they would leave Minneapolis.', 'State lawmakers have been focused on compromising with the companies before a July 1 deadline.', 'Under the new agreement, the statewide minimum wage rate for rideshare drivers will be $1.28 per mile and $0.31 per minute.', 'The rule will override the higher rate the Minneapolis City Council had initially proposed.', '“When you take it as a blended rate, that results in a 20% increase in pay for drivers in the state of Minnesota,” the state’s Democratic House Majority Leader Jamie Long told reporters Saturday night.', 'The bill also includes the “strongest insurance provision for drivers in the entire country,” Long added.', '“It was a hard-fought compromise,” said Democratic Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy, acknowledging negotiations over pay had to toe the line between addressing the needs of employees and the need of Minnesotans who rely on rideshare services for transportation.', '“We applaud the tens of thousands of riders & drivers who sent close to 100,000 emails to legislators — your voices were heard.', 'While the coming price increases may hurt riders and drivers alike, we will be able to continue to operate across the State under the compromise brokered by the Governor,” Uber’s policy director Josh Gold said in a statement.', 'Lyft has not responded to CNN’s request for comment.']",0.1198446285366897,"The ordinance, initially adopted in August 2023, was part of a larger effort to grant more comprehensive benefits to contract workers, who take freelance work at digital platforms like DoorDash, Instacart, Uber and Lyft.",The rule was delayed after Lyft and Uber warned they would leave Minneapolis.,0.929633229970932,"Minnesota government officials have struck a deal with rideshare companies Uber and Lyft to set minimum wage standards for drivers, lawmakers announced Saturday night.",,2024-05-20 "Tesla's Chinese rival Nio launches a new brand and car that undercuts the Model Y by $4,000",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/15/china-ev-price-wars-nios-onvo-brand-undercuts-tesla-model-y.html,2024-05-15T16:04:44+0000,"In this articleSHANGHAI — Chinese electric car company Nio revealed Wednesday that the first car for its new, lower-priced brand, Onvo, will be about $4,000 cheaper than Tesla's comparable Model Y.Deliveries for Onvo's first car, the L60 SUV, are set to begin in September, the company said. Pre-sales began after Wednesday's launch event.Nio CEO William Li said he expects Onvo to begin selling its cars overseas at some point but didn't specify when, according to an interview with CNBC's Eunice Yoon.Since launching about 10 years ago, Nio has focused on the premium segment of cars, priced around 300,000 yuan (US$41,500) or higher. The company has since expanded to Europe, but its monthly deliveries in China have generally remained modest versus the competition.Onvo's L60 starts at 219,900 yuan (US$30,439) versus the Model Y's 249,900 yuan (US$34,617). Elon Musk's electric SUV has been one of the best-selling pure battery-powered electric cars in China.Fierce competition in China's electric car market has invited new entrants and prompted many companies to cut prices.Smartphone company Xiaomi in late March entered the electric car market with its SU7 sedan to rival Tesla's Model 3 with a price that was also about $4,000 cheaper.The Model 3 has since cut its price by about $2,000 to 231,900 yuan (US$32,124), according to Tesla's China website. Xiaomi said Wednesday it had delivered 10,000 SU7 vehicles.BYD, which sold more cars than Elon Musk's automaker last year when including hybrids, mostly sells cars in the range of 100,000 yuan (US$13,851) or below. BYD has started to expand into higher-price segments in the last few years.Nio CEO Li confirmed to CNBC that the L60 is using lower-priced batteries from BYD.Global competition from Chinese electric-vehicle makers has also prompted stiff new tariffs from the Biden administration on imports of the vehicles to the U.S. Chinese EVs will be subject to a 100% tariff, the administration announced on Tuesday.When asked about the new levies, Li called them ""completely unreasonable,"" according to a CNBC translation from Mandarin to English. Li also noted the impact on consumers and climate goals.Onvo aims to set a ""new standard"" for the family car, Alan Ai, president of the Nio sub-brand, said at Wednesday's launch event in Mandarin, translated by CNBC.The brand's name stands for ""On Voyage,"" while its Chinese name ""Le Dao"" is meant to evoke a family having a happy time together.Ai made many comparisons to the Model Y and other cars during his presentation.He said the L60's interior was more spacious than that of Tesla's Model Y and Toyota's Rav4. He also said Onvo's new car had better shock absorption and cut tighter figure-eights compared with competitors.Onvo's advertised driving range on a single charge is at least as far as — or even further — than that of the Model Y depending on the version.As a sub-brand, Onvo vehicles can access many of Nio's battery swap and charging stations, Ai said.Ai also showed videos of Onvo models using driver-assist technology to navigate through country roads and city streets.Tesla's driver-assist software, Full Self-Driving, isn't available in China yet but is widely expected to be nearing Beijing's approval for rollout.",CNBC,15/05/2024,"[""In this articleSHANGHAI — Chinese electric car company Nio revealed Wednesday that the first car for its new, lower-priced brand, Onvo, will be about $4,000 cheaper than Tesla's comparable Model Y.Deliveries for Onvo's first car, the L60 SUV, are set to begin in September, the company said."", ""Pre-sales began after Wednesday's launch event."", ""Nio CEO William Li said he expects Onvo to begin selling its cars overseas at some point but didn't specify when, according to an interview with CNBC's Eunice Yoon."", 'Since launching about 10 years ago, Nio has focused on the premium segment of cars, priced around 300,000 yuan (US$41,500) or higher.', 'The company has since expanded to Europe, but its monthly deliveries in China have generally remained modest versus the competition.', ""Onvo's L60 starts at 219,900 yuan (US$30,439) versus the Model Y's 249,900 yuan (US$34,617)."", ""Elon Musk's electric SUV has been one of the best-selling pure battery-powered electric cars in China."", ""Fierce competition in China's electric car market has invited new entrants and prompted many companies to cut prices."", ""Smartphone company Xiaomi in late March entered the electric car market with its SU7 sedan to rival Tesla's Model 3 with a price that was also about $4,000 cheaper."", ""The Model 3 has since cut its price by about $2,000 to 231,900 yuan (US$32,124), according to Tesla's China website."", 'Xiaomi said Wednesday it had delivered 10,000 SU7 vehicles.', ""BYD, which sold more cars than Elon Musk's automaker last year when including hybrids, mostly sells cars in the range of 100,000 yuan (US$13,851) or below."", 'BYD has started to expand into higher-price segments in the last few years.', 'Nio CEO Li confirmed to CNBC that the L60 is using lower-priced batteries from BYD.Global competition from Chinese electric-vehicle makers has also prompted stiff new tariffs from the Biden administration on imports of the vehicles to the U.S. Chinese EVs will be subject to a 100% tariff, the administration announced on Tuesday.', 'When asked about the new levies, Li called them ""completely unreasonable,"" according to a CNBC translation from Mandarin to English.', 'Li also noted the impact on consumers and climate goals.', 'Onvo aims to set a ""new standard"" for the family car, Alan Ai, president of the Nio sub-brand, said at Wednesday\'s launch event in Mandarin, translated by CNBC.The brand\'s name stands for ""On Voyage,"" while its Chinese name ""Le Dao"" is meant to evoke a family having a happy time together.', 'Ai made many comparisons to the Model Y and other cars during his presentation.', ""He said the L60's interior was more spacious than that of Tesla's Model Y and Toyota's Rav4."", ""He also said Onvo's new car had better shock absorption and cut tighter figure-eights compared with competitors."", ""Onvo's advertised driving range on a single charge is at least as far as — or even further — than that of the Model Y depending on the version."", ""As a sub-brand, Onvo vehicles can access many of Nio's battery swap and charging stations, Ai said."", 'Ai also showed videos of Onvo models using driver-assist technology to navigate through country roads and city streets.', ""Tesla's driver-assist software, Full Self-Driving, isn't available in China yet but is widely expected to be nearing Beijing's approval for rollout.""]",0.0499672125822904,Elon Musk's electric SUV has been one of the best-selling pure battery-powered electric cars in China.,"In this articleSHANGHAI — Chinese electric car company Nio revealed Wednesday that the first car for its new, lower-priced brand, Onvo, will be about $4,000 cheaper than Tesla's comparable Model Y.Deliveries for Onvo's first car, the L60 SUV, are set to begin in September, the company said.",0.5664129389656914,He also said Onvo's new car had better shock absorption and cut tighter figure-eights compared with competitors.,"Nio CEO Li confirmed to CNBC that the L60 is using lower-priced batteries from BYD.Global competition from Chinese electric-vehicle makers has also prompted stiff new tariffs from the Biden administration on imports of the vehicles to the U.S. Chinese EVs will be subject to a 100% tariff, the administration announced on Tuesday.",2024-05-20 The NBA is picking its TV partners — and a deal hinges on Warner Bros. Discovery's next move,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/nba-tv-rights-deal-hinges-on-warner-bros-discovery.html,2024-05-16T23:14:28+0000,"In this articleWhether it's two people in a marriage or a company and a sports league, it's not easy to break up a 40-year partnership.The NBA and Warner Bros. Discovery's Turner Sports have been in business together for nearly four decades. The relationship is now in jeopardy, as Comcast's NBCUniversal is attempting to steal away its package of games with a $2.5 billion per-year offer, as CNBC has previously reported.The league ended its exclusive window to renew a deal with its two current media partners, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery, on April 22. Since then, the league has set a framework to renew with Disney, bring in Amazon as a new third partner, and sell its other package to either Warner Bros. Discovery or NBCUniversal, according to people familiar with the matter. The league stands to triple the total value of a new deal from about $24 billion to $76 billion or more.Warner Bros. Discovery continues to have discussions with the NBA about keeping the rights, according to people familiar with the matter. The league could still decide to simply renew with its incumbent partner, but it's not likely, said two of the people, who asked not to be named because the talks are private.The more probable path would be for the league to sign papers with NBCUniversal, formally securing its bid. That would trigger a contractual option for Warner Bros. Discovery to match the offer.This is where things might get thorny.Both the NBA and Warner Bros. Discovery have begun poring over legal language to determine if the league can reject a potential match, the people said. The contractual wording is vague, and it's unclear if the NBA has full discretion to walk away from Warner Bros. Discovery if it matches the bid, said the people.If Warner Bros. Discovery decides to match, and the NBA moves to choose NBCUniversal's offer, the sides may be headed for a lawsuit. Warner Bros. Discovery believes it's fairly well protected by the contractual language, one of the people said.Still, that remains hypothetical at this point. It's possible Warner Bros. Discovery won't match NBCUniversal's bid, which would avoid potential conflict.Some league officials are worried Warner Bros. Discovery's balance sheet can't handle spending $2.5 billion a year on the NBA, according to people familiar with the matter. Warner Bros. Discovery has a market valuation of about $20 billion and an enterprise value of about $60 billion, including $43.2 billion of gross debt, as of the end of the company's fiscal first quarter. The company had a leverage ratio (net debt to adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) of 4.1.Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav has both publicly and privately preached the importance of financial discipline for the company.NBCUniversal parent Comcast has a market capitalization of about $154 billion and an enterprise value of $244 billion. Comcast's leverage ratio is about 2.5.NBA officials are more comfortable Comcast can pay what would amount to more than double the previous price for the package, according to the people familiar to the matter. Warner Bros. Discovery had been paying $1.2 billion per year to air NBA games. The new package also includes fewer games than the current one because the NBA is likely to introduce a third partner — most likely to be Amazon.Spokespeople for Warner Bros. Discovery and the NBA declined to comment.Warner Bros. Discovery, Disney and Fox announced Thursday they plan to name their new sports streaming platform Venu, taking inspiration from where live sports are played. The new joint venture, one-third owned by each media company, will offer a bundle of sports networks and ESPN+ at a still to be determined price that's less expensive than traditional cable. CNBC reported earlier this year the price could be around $45 or $50 a month. The service will debut in the fall, the companies have said.The three companies haven't yet formally signed paperwork on the venture as they await regulatory approval. If Warner Bros. Discovery loses the NBA, that will diminish the value of the service for consumers, as NBCUniversal and Amazon aren't partners in the product.Warner Bros. Discovery licenses the rights to other sports leagues and groups, including MLB, the NHL and the National Collegiate Athletic Association's March Madness. The company will also have the NBA next year no matter what, as the new rights deal doesn't kick in until the end of the 2024-25 season.There's been no discussion about shutting down the venture before it launches if Warner Bros. Discovery loses the NBA, according to a person familiar with the matter. Still, without the NBA, Disney and Fox would be contributing the lion's share of sports content for the service. Disney's ESPN and Fox own both college football and NFL packages, unlike Warner Bros. Discovery. The three companies plan to split revenue commensurate with the affiliate fees associated with their linear networks.Warner Bros. Discovery could use the money it saves from not obtaining NBA rights to spend on other sports, such as more MLB games or bidding for UFC, which will likely begin renewal discussions with media companies in early 2025.ESPN plans to launch its own ""flagship"" streaming service in the fall of 2025.Disclosure: Comcast's NBCUniversal is the parent company of CNBC.WATCH: The root problem facing streamers is the lack of daily usage, says LightShed's Greenfield",CNBC,16/05/2024,"[""In this articleWhether it's two people in a marriage or a company and a sports league, it's not easy to break up a 40-year partnership."", ""The NBA and Warner Bros. Discovery's Turner Sports have been in business together for nearly four decades."", ""The relationship is now in jeopardy, as Comcast's NBCUniversal is attempting to steal away its package of games with a $2.5 billion per-year offer, as CNBC has previously reported."", 'The league ended its exclusive window to renew a deal with its two current media partners, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery, on April 22.', 'Since then, the league has set a framework to renew with Disney, bring in Amazon as a new third partner, and sell its other package to either Warner Bros. Discovery or NBCUniversal, according to people familiar with the matter.', 'The league stands to triple the total value of a new deal from about $24 billion to $76 billion or more.', 'Warner Bros. Discovery continues to have discussions with the NBA about keeping the rights, according to people familiar with the matter.', ""The league could still decide to simply renew with its incumbent partner, but it's not likely, said two of the people, who asked not to be named because the talks are private."", 'The more probable path would be for the league to sign papers with NBCUniversal, formally securing its bid.', 'That would trigger a contractual option for Warner Bros. Discovery to match the offer.', 'This is where things might get thorny.', 'Both the NBA and Warner Bros. Discovery have begun poring over legal language to determine if the league can reject a potential match, the people said.', ""The contractual wording is vague, and it's unclear if the NBA has full discretion to walk away from Warner Bros. Discovery if it matches the bid, said the people."", ""If Warner Bros. Discovery decides to match, and the NBA moves to choose NBCUniversal's offer, the sides may be headed for a lawsuit."", ""Warner Bros. Discovery believes it's fairly well protected by the contractual language, one of the people said."", 'Still, that remains hypothetical at this point.', ""It's possible Warner Bros. Discovery won't match NBCUniversal's bid, which would avoid potential conflict."", ""Some league officials are worried Warner Bros. Discovery's balance sheet can't handle spending $2.5 billion a year on the NBA, according to people familiar with the matter."", ""Warner Bros. Discovery has a market valuation of about $20 billion and an enterprise value of about $60 billion, including $43.2 billion of gross debt, as of the end of the company's fiscal first quarter."", 'The company had a leverage ratio (net debt to adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) of 4.1.Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav has both publicly and privately preached the importance of financial discipline for the company.', 'NBCUniversal parent Comcast has a market capitalization of about $154 billion and an enterprise value of $244 billion.', ""Comcast's leverage ratio is about 2.5.NBA officials are more comfortable Comcast can pay what would amount to more than double the previous price for the package,according to the people familiar to the matter."", 'Warner Bros. Discovery had been paying $1.2 billion per year to air NBA games.', 'The new package also includes fewer games than the current one because the NBA is likely to introduce a third partner — most likely to be Amazon.', 'Spokespeople for Warner Bros. Discovery and the NBA declined to comment.', 'Warner Bros. Discovery, Disney and Fox announced Thursday they plan to name their new sports streaming platform Venu, taking inspiration from where live sports are played.', ""The new joint venture, one-third owned by each media company, will offer a bundle of sports networks and ESPN+ at a still to be determined price that's less expensive than traditional cable."", 'CNBC reported earlier this year the price could be around $45 or $50 a month.', 'The service will debut in the fall, the companies have said.', ""The three companies haven't yet formally signed paperwork on the venture as they await regulatory approval."", ""If Warner Bros. Discovery loses the NBA, that will diminish the value of the service for consumers, as NBCUniversal and Amazon aren't partners in the product."", ""Warner Bros. Discovery licenses the rights to other sports leagues and groups, including MLB, the NHL and the National Collegiate Athletic Association's March Madness."", ""The company will also have the NBA next year no matter what, as the new rights deal doesn't kick in until the end of the 2024-25 season."", ""There's been no discussion about shutting down the venture before it launches if Warner Bros. Discovery loses the NBA, according to a person familiar with the matter."", ""Still, without the NBA, Disney and Fox would be contributing the lion's share of sports content for the service."", ""Disney's ESPN and Fox own both college football and NFL packages, unlike Warner Bros. Discovery."", 'The three companies plan to split revenue commensurate with the affiliate fees associated with their linear networks.', 'Warner Bros. Discovery could use the money it saves from not obtaining NBA rights to spend on other sports, such as more MLB games or bidding for UFC, which will likely begin renewal discussions with media companies in early 2025.ESPN plans to launch its own ""flagship"" streaming service in the fall of 2025.Disclosure: Comcast\'s NBCUniversal is the parent company of CNBC.WATCH: The root problem facing streamers is the lack of daily usage, says LightShed\'s Greenfield']",0.000679100756805,"Warner Bros. Discovery, Disney and Fox announced Thursday they plan to name their new sports streaming platform Venu, taking inspiration from where live sports are played.","The relationship is now in jeopardy, as Comcast's NBCUniversal is attempting to steal away its package of games with a $2.5 billion per-year offer, as CNBC has previously reported.",0.1325168354170663,"Comcast's leverage ratio is about 2.5.NBA officials are more comfortable Comcast can pay what would amount to more than double the previous price for the package,according to the people familiar to the matter.","If Warner Bros. Discovery loses the NBA, that will diminish the value of the service for consumers, as NBCUniversal and Amazon aren't partners in the product.",2024-05-20 Frontier Airlines does away with change fees in budget airline pricing overhaul,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/17/frontier-airlines-change-fees-scrapped.html,2024-05-17T17:18:08+0000,"In this articleFrontier Airlines said it will stop charging customers a fee to change their flights, taking a page from larger competitors as the Biden administration issues stricter rules targeting so-called ""junk fees.""The change is part of an overhaul announced on Friday of the budget airline's longtime pricing model, which brings customers in the door with eye-catching low base fares but charges a fee for everything else such as seating assignments and carry-on baggage. That model is shared by fellow discounter Spirit Airlines.Frontier said it will start offering packages that include some of those add-ons, among others, such as early boarding. While some fares will still allow travelers to add on options a la carte, ""we expect that option to be a minority of customers,"" Frontier CEO Barry Biffle told CNBC.A new ""economy"" bundle that comes with a carry-on and a seat assignment will start at $30 more than a basic fare, while a ""premium"" bundle that offers those perks plus earlier boarding will be $50 more than the basic fare. For at least $100 more than a basic fare, ""business"" bundle travelers will also be able to check two bags and get a seat at the front of the plane with more room.Last month, the U.S. Department of Transportation issued a final rule that requires airlines to tell customers about fees, including those for checked or carry-on baggage, up front, a change the DOT said would save travelers more than half a billion dollars a year.Frontier currently charges up to $99 to change flights if the change is made within a week of the trip, according to the airline's website. Larger rivals Delta, American and United scrapped change fees during the Covid-19 pandemic for travelers who were booked in standard economy class and above. Southwest Airlines does not charge customers to change their tickets.""The truth is the big four [U.S. airlines] all have no change fees on the majority of their products, so we were not as desirable,"" Biffle said. He said change fees were a ""top complaint"" of travelers. Travelers who buy the cheapest option on Frontier will still have to pay to change their flights.Frontier also said flight credits would be valid for 12 months, up from three months, starting with tickets issued on Friday, and that it will reintroduce live phone support for travelers flying within 24 hours or to elite members of its frequent flyer program.",CNBC,17/05/2024,"['In this articleFrontier Airlines said it will stop charging customers a fee to change their flights, taking a page from larger competitors as the Biden administration issues stricter rules targeting so-called ""junk fees.', '""The change is part of an overhaul announced on Friday of the budget airline\'s longtime pricing model, which brings customers in the door with eye-catching low base fares but charges a fee for everything else such as seating assignments and carry-on baggage.', 'That model is shared by fellow discounter Spirit Airlines.', 'Frontier said it will start offering packages that include some of those add-ons, among others, such as early boarding.', 'While some fares will still allow travelers to add on options a la carte, ""we expect that option to be a minority of customers,"" Frontier CEO Barry Biffle told CNBC.A new ""economy"" bundle that comes with a carry-on and a seat assignment will start at $30 more than a basic fare, while a ""premium"" bundle that offers those perks plus earlier boarding will be $50 more than the basic fare.', 'For at least $100 more than a basic fare, ""business"" bundle travelers will also be able to check two bags and get a seat at the front of the plane with more room.', 'Last month, the U.S. Department of Transportation issued a final rule that requires airlines to tell customers about fees, including those for checked or carry-on baggage, up front, a change the DOT said would save travelers more than half a billion dollars a year.', ""Frontier currently charges up to $99 to change flights if the change is made within a week of the trip, according to the airline's website."", 'Larger rivals Delta, American and United scrapped change fees during the Covid-19 pandemic for travelers who were booked in standard economy class and above.', 'Southwest Airlines does not charge customers to change their tickets.', '""The truth is the big four [U.S. airlines] all have no change fees on the majority of their products, so we were not as desirable,"" Biffle said.', 'He said change fees were a ""top complaint"" of travelers.', 'Travelers who buy the cheapest option on Frontier will still have to pay to change their flights.', 'Frontier also said flight credits would be valid for 12 months, up from three months, starting with tickets issued on Friday, and that it will reintroduce live phone support for travelers flying within 24 hours or to elite members of its frequent flyer program.']",0.0549664497380016,"Frontier also said flight credits would be valid for 12 months, up from three months, starting with tickets issued on Friday, and that it will reintroduce live phone support for travelers flying within 24 hours or to elite members of its frequent flyer program.","""The change is part of an overhaul announced on Friday of the budget airline's longtime pricing model, which brings customers in the door with eye-catching low base fares but charges a fee for everything else such as seating assignments and carry-on baggage.",0.3490889271100362,"Frontier also said flight credits would be valid for 12 months, up from three months, starting with tickets issued on Friday, and that it will reintroduce live phone support for travelers flying within 24 hours or to elite members of its frequent flyer program.","""The truth is the big four [U.S. airlines] all have no change fees on the majority of their products, so we were not as desirable,"" Biffle said.",2024-05-20 Wealthy Americans are starting to spend more carefully,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/19/economy/stocks-week-ahead-wealthy-americans-spending/index.html," Published 7:30 AM EDT, Sun May 19, 2024 ","A version of this story first appeared in CNN Business’ Before the Bell newsletter. Not a subscriber? You can sign up right here. You can listen to an audio version of the newsletter by clicking the same link. Americans with deep pockets have played a growing role in powering the US economy with their spending. But their days of splurging like there’s no tomorrow might be coming to an end. US household wealth surged in recent years, despite the scourge of high inflation and the Federal Reserve’s bitter medicine of elevated borrowing costs to rein in price increases. A robust stock market coupled with rising home values have boosted Americans’ wealth from 2019 through 2022, according to a Federal Reserve report on household finances. That increase is known as “the wealth effect,” and it has continued to shore up Americans’ finances as stocks shatter records and high bond yields beef up savings accounts. Plus, Americans who locked in a low mortgage rate before the Fed began to hike interest rates in 2022 and have decided to stay put have been shielded from the effects of high mortgage rates. Put together, that means many consumers have not only been able to withstand inflation, to a degree, but they’ve also been able to spend on travel, concerts and big-ticket items. US economic growth accelerated at a brisk pace in 2023, largely thanks to the US consumer. And it’s Americans older than 54 who hold the vast amount of household wealth in the US, more than 70%, according to Fed data. But the economy’s momentum has slowed a bit recently with figures on employment and retail spending for April coming in weaker than expected. While the broader economy remains healthy, including the job market with sub-4% unemployment, there are signs that an important corner has been turned. The shifting behavior of wealthy Americans is one of them. “It’s well known that the lowest income consumer is really struggling with inflation, but from a purely economic standpoint, it is the higher quintiles of earners that do the most spending,” Nanette Abuhoff Jacobson, global investment strategist at Hartford Funds, told CNN. There’s been some evidence of wealthy Americans growing cautious in the latest round of company earnings results. British luxury retailer Burberry reported last week that its profits plummeted by 40% in the budget year ending in late March. Sales in the Americas dropped off by 12% over the year. “Executing our plan against a backdrop of slowing luxury demand has been challenging,” Jonathan Akeroyd, Burberry’s chief executive, said in a statement. LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton reported in its latest earnings results last month that demand for high-end liquors has declined sharply in the US, leading to high inventory levels for the French luxury conglomerate’s alcoholic beverages division. Walmart, which traditionally caters to lower and middle-income Americans, even reported last week that its gains last quarter were “primarily driven by upper-income households,” or those making more than $100,000 a year. But the broader picture isn’t all doom and gloom. It’s been mixed: Royal Caribbean Cruises topped expectations for its first-quarter earnings results thanks to solid bookings and robust onboard spending. Demand for cruises, arguably an activity for the well-off, shows there isn’t this mass retrenchment from rich Americans just yet. But some are thinking twice before swiping that card or clicking on the purchase button. Consumers overall have become more price sensitive, according to various examples in the Fed’s periodic collection of anecdotes known as the Beige Book. “When we talk to CEOs and CFOs, they’re saying that people are pushing back, so companies now aren’t feeling as comfortable pushing through price increases,” said Jacobson of Hartford Funds. “And company earnings in the consumer discretionary area are ones to continue to watch for signs of consumer stress.” Ariel Barnes plunged into a credit card debt spiral in college, and a decade later she’s yet to escape. Barnes, a manager of gift processing at Jackson State University, has maxed out seven credit cards and is struggling to make minimum payments on $30,000 of credit card debt. “The interest is so high that it’s hard to get out of it,” Barnes, who is 28 years old and lives in Jackson, Mississippi, told CNN in a phone interview on Thursday.Barnes is hardly alone. Roughly one in seven (15.3%) Gen Z credit card borrowers have maxed out their credit cards, according to new research from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. (The NY Fed defined Gen Z as borrowers born between 1995 and 2011, though others mark the cut off as 1996 or 1997). By comparison, just 4.8% of Baby Boomer borrowers and 9.6% of Gen Xers have maxed out their credit cards, which can be a sign of a severely tight cash-flow problem, my colleague Matt Egan reports.Read more here. Monday: Earnings from Palo Alto Networks, Trip.com and Zoom. Federal Reserve officials Michael Barr, Christopher Waller, Philip Jefferson and Raphael Bostic deliver remarks. Tuesday: Earnings from Lowe’s, AutoZone, Macy’s and Urban Outfitters. Federal Reserve officials Christopher Waller, John Williams, Raphael Bostic, Michael Barr, Loretta Mester and Susan Collins deliver remarks. Wednesday: Earnings from NVIDIA, TJX, Target, Guess?, Petco, Children’s Place and Red Robin. The UK’s Office for National Statistics releases April inflation data. The National Association of Realtors reports April home sales. The Federal Reserve release minutes from its May policymaking meeting. Thursday: Earnings from Intuit, Medtronic, Workday, Ross, Dollar Tree, Burlington, Ralph Lauren, Build-A-Bear Workshop and 23andMe. The US Labor Department reports the number of new applications for jobless benefits in the week ending May 18. The Chicago Fed releases its National Activity Index for April. S&P Global releases May business surveys gauging economic activity in the US manufacturing and services sectors. The US Commerce Department reports new home sales in April. Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic delivers remarks. Friday: Earnings from Booz Allen Hamilton, Buckle and Big Lots. The US Commerce Department reports new orders for durable goods in April. Fed Governor Christopher Waller delivers remarks. The University of Michigan releases its final reading of consumer sentiment in May.",CNN,19/05/2024,"['A version of this story first appeared in CNN Business’ Before the Bell newsletter.', 'Not a subscriber?', 'You can sign upright here.', 'You can listen to an audio version of the newsletter by clicking the same link.', 'Americans with deep pockets have played a growing role in powering the US economy with their spending.', 'But their days of splurging like there’s no tomorrow might be coming to an end.', 'US household wealthsurged in recent years, despite the scourge of high inflation and the Federal Reserve’s bitter medicine of elevated borrowing costs to rein in price increases.', 'A robust stock market coupled with rising home values have boosted Americans’ wealth from 2019 through 2022, according to a Federal Reserve report on household finances.', 'That increase is known as “the wealth effect,” and it has continued to shore up Americans’ finances as stocksshatter recordsand high bond yields beef up savings accounts.', 'Plus, Americans who locked in a low mortgage rate before the Fed began to hike interest rates in 2022 and have decided to stay puthave been shieldedfrom the effects of high mortgage rates.', 'Put together, that means many consumers have not only been able to withstand inflation, to a degree, but they’ve also been able to spend on travel, concerts and big-ticket items.', 'US economic growth accelerated at a brisk pace in 2023, largely thanks to the US consumer.', 'And it’s Americans older than 54 who hold the vast amount of household wealth in the US, more than 70%, according to Fed data.', 'But the economy’s momentum has slowed a bit recently with figures onemploymentand retail spending for April coming in weaker than expected.', 'While the broader economy remains healthy, including the job market with sub-4% unemployment, there are signs that an important corner has been turned.', 'The shifting behavior of wealthy Americans is one of them.', '“It’s well known that the lowest income consumer is really struggling with inflation, but from a purely economic standpoint, it is the higher quintiles of earners that do the most spending,” Nanette Abuhoff Jacobson, global investment strategist at Hartford Funds, told CNN.', 'There’s been some evidence of wealthy Americans growing cautious in the latest round of company earnings results.', 'British luxury retailer Burberry reported last week that its profits plummeted by 40% in the budget year ending in late March.', 'Sales in the Americas dropped off by 12% over the year.', '“Executing our plan against a backdrop of slowing luxury demand has been challenging,” Jonathan Akeroyd, Burberry’s chief executive, said in a statement.', 'LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton reported in its latest earnings results last month that demand for high-end liquors has declined sharply in the US, leading to high inventory levels for the French luxury conglomerate’s alcoholic beverages division.', 'Walmart, which traditionally caters to lower and middle-income Americans, even reported last week that its gains last quarter were “primarily driven by upper-income households,” or those making more than $100,000 a year.', 'But the broader picture isn’t all doom and gloom.', 'It’s been mixed: Royal Caribbean Cruises topped expectations for its first-quarter earnings results thanks to solid bookings and robust onboard spending.', 'Demand for cruises, arguably an activity for the well-off, shows there isn’t this mass retrenchment from rich Americans just yet.', 'But some are thinking twice before swiping that card or clicking on the purchase button.', 'Consumers overall have become more price sensitive, according to various examples in the Fed’s periodic collection of anecdotes known as the Beige Book.', '“When we talk to CEOs and CFOs, they’re saying that people are pushing back, so companies now aren’t feeling as comfortable pushing through price increases,” said Jacobson of Hartford Funds.', '“And company earnings in the consumer discretionary area are ones to continue to watch for signs of consumer stress.”', 'Ariel Barnes plunged into a credit card debt spiral in college, and a decade later she’s yet to escape.', 'Barnes, a manager of gift processing at Jackson State University, has maxed out seven credit cards and is struggling to make minimum payments on $30,000 of credit card debt.', '“The interest is so high that it’s hard to get out of it,” Barnes, who is 28 years old and lives in Jackson, Mississippi, told CNN in a phone interview on Thursday.', 'Barnes is hardly alone.', 'Roughly one in seven (15.3%) Gen Z credit card borrowers have maxed out their credit cards, according to new research from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. (', 'The NY Fed defined Gen Z as borrowers born between 1995 and 2011, though others mark the cut off as 1996 or 1997).', 'By comparison, just 4.8% of Baby Boomer borrowers and 9.6% of Gen Xers have maxed out their credit cards, which can be a sign of a severely tight cash-flow problem, my colleague Matt Egan reports.', 'Read more here.', 'Monday:Earnings from Palo Alto Networks, Trip.com and Zoom.', 'Federal Reserve officials Michael Barr, Christopher Waller, Philip Jefferson and Raphael Bostic deliver remarks.', 'Tuesday:Earnings from Lowe’s, AutoZone, Macy’s and Urban Outfitters.', 'Federal Reserve officials Christopher Waller, John Williams, Raphael Bostic, Michael Barr, Loretta Mester and Susan Collins deliver remarks.', 'Wednesday:Earnings from NVIDIA, TJX, Target, Guess?,', 'Petco, Children’s Place and Red Robin.', 'The UK’s Office for National Statistics releases April inflation data.', 'The National Association of Realtors reports April home sales.', 'The Federal Reserve release minutes from its May policymaking meeting.', 'Thursday:Earnings from Intuit, Medtronic, Workday, Ross, Dollar Tree, Burlington, Ralph Lauren, Build-A-Bear Workshop and 23andMe.', 'The US Labor Department reports the number of new applications for jobless benefits in the week ending May 18.', 'The Chicago Fed releases its National Activity Index for April.', 'S&P Global releases May business surveys gauging economic activity in the US manufacturing and services sectors.', 'The US Commerce Department reports new home sales in April.', 'Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic delivers remarks.', 'Friday:Earnings from Booz Allen Hamilton, Buckle and Big Lots.', 'The US Commerce Department reports new orders for durable goods in April.', 'Fed Governor Christopher Waller delivers remarks.', 'The University of Michigan releases its final reading of consumer sentiment in May.']",0.0941178414718663,"A robust stock market coupled with rising home values have boosted Americans’ wealth from 2019 through 2022, according to a Federal Reserve report on household finances.",But the broader picture isn’t all doom and gloom.,0.0081581672032674,"A robust stock market coupled with rising home values have boosted Americans’ wealth from 2019 through 2022, according to a Federal Reserve report on household finances.","LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton reported in its latest earnings results last month that demand for high-end liquors has declined sharply in the US, leading to high inventory levels for the French luxury conglomerate’s alcoholic beverages division.",2024-05-20 Under Armour is laying off workers as retailer says North America sales will plunge this year,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/under-armour-uaa-earnings-q4-2024.html,2024-05-16T20:14:41+0000,"In this articleUnder Armour announced a broad restructuring plan on Thursday as it said sales in its largest market, North America, plunged 10% and predicted the trend will get worse throughout its current fiscal year. The athletic apparel retailer also saw profits sink by more than 96% during its fiscal fourth quarter, compared with the year-ago period. It's unclear how many employees Under Armour will lay off as part of the restructuring, but the plan is expected to cost between $70 million and $90 million, a portion of which will be used for employee severance and benefits costs. The company declined to share more information with CNBC about its restructuring.The company's shares initially plunged double digits in pre-market trading after its earnings report was released, but later rebounded after its earnings call with Wall Street analysts. Shares closed more than 1% lower. Here's how the athletic apparel retailer did in its fiscal fourth quarter compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:The company's reported net income for the three-month period that ended March 31 was $6.6 million, or 2 cents per share, compared with $170.6 million, or 38 cents per share, a year earlier. Excluding one-time items, the company reported earnings of 11 cents per share. Sales dropped to $1.33 billion, down about 5% from $1.4 billion a year earlier. During the quarter, sales in North America declined 10% to $772 million, worse than the $780 million that analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount. Under Armour said it expects sales to continue to worsen in North America. The company anticipates they will drop between 15% and 17% in its current fiscal year. ""Due to a confluence of factors, including lower wholesale channel demand and inconsistent execution across our business, we are seizing this critical moment to make proactive decisions to build a premium positioning for our brand, which will pressure our top and bottom line in the near term,"" founder and CEO Kevin Plank said in a statement. ""Over the next 18 months, there is a significant opportunity to reconstitute Under Armour's brand strength through achieving more, by doing less and focusing on our core fundamentals,"" he added.Across Under Armour's business, the company is expecting revenue to be down ""at a low-double-digit percentage rate"" in its current fiscal year, while analysts had expected sales to grow by 2.1%, according to LSEG. The company is planning to cut down on promotions and discounting, which it expects will lead its gross margin to rise between 0.75 and 1 percentage point for the fiscal year. It's expecting diluted earnings per share to be between 2 cents and 5 cents and adjusted diluted earnings per share to be between 18 cents and 21 cents for the year. Analysts had expected earnings per share of 52 cents, according to LSEG. Under Armour's rough quarter comes about two months after the retailer announced former Marriott executive Stephanie Linnartz would be stepping down from her role as CEO after barely a year on the job and Plank would once again take the helm of the company he founded in 1996. Linnartz was the second CEO the company has cycled through in less than two years. During a call with analysts, Plank was blunt about where things had gone wrong for Under Armour. He pointed to inconsistent leadership as one of the primary issues.""With several CEOs and heads of products, marketing and North America over the past half decade, ongoing turnover of critical leadership has been central to our inability to stay agile and decisive,"" said Plank.Linnartz was hired on a bet that her experience building out Marriott's renowned Bonvoy loyalty program and driving digital revenue for the hotel giant would offset her lack of experience in the retail industry. Before her departure, she managed to overhaul Under Armour's C-suite and build out its loyalty program. She was attempting to pivot the brand's assortment to a more athleisure-focused offering that had more stylish options for women, who tend to spend more on clothes and shoes than men do.Now Plank is looking to undo some of that work. He told analysts that the company had ""taken our eyes off"" its core men's apparel business, which has ""significantly impacted"" the brand's perception and led it to become ""more promotional and commoditized.""""We will rectify this,"" said Plank. ""This focus does not mean that we are deprioritizing our footwear or women's business per se but from a sequencing perspective, men's apparel will be our highest priority.""As Plank tries to reset the business, he said Under Armour plans to reduce its style counts by roughly 25% over the next 18 months and cut down the amount of time it takes to get a product from an idea to a showroom floor. He aims to streamline the process so it'll only take between 6 and12 months instead of the 18 months it currently takes — a system he called ""just plain uncompetitive in the 2024 landscape.""The full restructuring will focus on streamlining Under Armour's overall business, reducing silos and ensuring that every staffer's work is directly contributing to its primary goal: ""Selling more shirts and shoes.""""We are simply doing too much stuff. There are too many products, too many initiatives, too much of too much,"" said Plank. ""To reconstitute this brand, we must be highly focused and prioritize what needs to get done so that our teams know exactly what to do with a clear definition of success.""Read the full earnings release here.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"['In this articleUnder Armour announced a broad restructuring plan on Thursday as it said sales in its largest market, North America, plunged 10% and predicted the trend will get worse throughout its current fiscal year.', 'The athletic apparel retailer also saw profits sink by more than 96% during its fiscal fourth quarter, compared with the year-ago period.', ""It's unclear how many employees Under Armour will lay off as part of the restructuring, but the plan is expected to cost between $70 million and $90 million, a portion of which will be used for employee severance and benefits costs."", 'The company declined to share more information with CNBC about its restructuring.', ""The company's shares initially plunged double digits in pre-market trading after its earnings report was released, but later rebounded after its earnings call with Wall Street analysts."", 'Shares closed more than 1% lower.', ""Here's how the athletic apparel retailer did in its fiscal fourth quarter compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:The company's reported net income for the three-month period that ended March 31 was $6.6 million, or 2 cents per share, compared with $170.6 million, or 38 cents per share, a year earlier."", 'Excluding one-time items, the company reported earnings of 11 cents per share.', 'Sales dropped to $1.33 billion, down about 5% from $1.4 billion a year earlier.', 'During the quarter, sales in North America declined 10% to $772 million, worse than the $780 million that analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount.', 'Under Armour said it expects sales to continue to worsen in North America.', 'The company anticipates they will drop between 15% and 17% in its current fiscal year.', '""Due to a confluence of factors, including lower wholesale channel demand and inconsistent execution across our business, we are seizing this critical moment to make proactive decisions to build a premium positioning for our brand, which will pressure our top and bottom line in the near term,"" founder and CEO Kevin Plank said in a statement.', '""Over the next 18 months, there is a significant opportunity to reconstitute Under Armour\'s brand strength through achieving more, by doing less and focusing on our core fundamentals,"" he added.', 'Across Under Armour\'s business, the company is expecting revenue to be down ""at a low-double-digit percentage rate"" in its current fiscal year, while analysts had expected sales to grow by 2.1%, according to LSEG.The company is planning to cut down on promotions and discounting, which it expects will lead its gross margin to rise between 0.75 and 1 percentage point for the fiscal year.', ""It's expecting diluted earnings per share to be between 2 cents and 5 cents and adjusted diluted earnings per share to be between 18 cents and 21 cents for the year."", ""Analysts had expected earnings per share of 52 cents, according to LSEG.Under Armour's rough quarter comes about two months after the retailer announced former Marriott executive Stephanie Linnartz would be stepping down from her role as CEO after barely a year on the job and Plank would once again take the helm of the company he founded in 1996.Linnartz was the second CEO the company has cycled through in less than two years."", 'During a call with analysts, Plank was blunt about where things had gone wrong for Under Armour.', 'He pointed to inconsistent leadership as one of the primary issues.', '""With several CEOs and heads of products, marketing and North America over the past half decade, ongoing turnover of critical leadership has been central to our inability to stay agile and decisive,"" said Plank.', ""Linnartz was hired on a bet that her experience building out Marriott's renowned Bonvoy loyalty program and driving digital revenue for the hotel giant would offset her lack of experience in the retail industry."", ""Before her departure, she managed to overhaul Under Armour's C-suite and build out its loyalty program."", ""She was attempting to pivot the brand's assortment to a more athleisure-focused offering that had more stylish options for women, who tend to spend more on clothes and shoes than men do."", 'Now Plank is looking to undo some of that work.', 'He told analysts that the company had ""taken our eyes off"" its core men\'s apparel business, which has ""significantly impacted"" the brand\'s perception and led it to become ""more promotional and commoditized.', '""""We will rectify this,"" said Plank. ""', ""This focus does not mean that we are deprioritizing our footwear or women's business per se but from a sequencing perspective, men's apparel will be our highest priority."", '""As Plank tries to reset the business, he said Under Armour plans to reduce its style counts by roughly 25% over the next 18 months and cut down the amount of time it takes to get a product from an idea to a showroom floor.', 'He aims to streamline the process so it\'ll only take between 6 and12 months instead of the 18 months it currently takes — a system he called ""just plain uncompetitive in the 2024 landscape.', '""The full restructuring will focus on streamlining Under Armour\'s overall business, reducing silos and ensuring that every staffer\'s work is directly contributing to its primary goal: ""Selling more shirts and shoes.', '""""We are simply doing too much stuff.', 'There are too many products, too many initiatives, too much of too much,"" said Plank. ""', 'To reconstitute this brand, we must be highly focused and prioritize what needs to get done so that our teams know exactly what to do with a clear definition of success.', '""Read the full earnings release here.']",0.0605298505650281,"To reconstitute this brand, we must be highly focused and prioritize what needs to get done so that our teams know exactly what to do with a clear definition of success.","Across Under Armour's business, the company is expecting revenue to be down ""at a low-double-digit percentage rate"" in its current fiscal year, while analysts had expected sales to grow by 2.1%, according to LSEG.The company is planning to cut down on promotions and discounting, which it expects will lead its gross margin to rise between 0.75 and 1 percentage point for the fiscal year.",-0.484110727196648,"""Over the next 18 months, there is a significant opportunity to reconstitute Under Armour's brand strength through achieving more, by doing less and focusing on our core fundamentals,"" he added.","During the quarter, sales in North America declined 10% to $772 million, worse than the $780 million that analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount.",2024-05-20 US woman accused of stealing identities to give North Koreans jobs,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-69024813,2024-05-17T00:34:01.000Z,"US prosecutors have accused an American woman of helping North Koreans find remote jobs in the US and then send their wages back to North Korea. Christina Chapman is charged alongside three North Korean nationals with participating in the elaborate plot. The Arizona resident allegedly stole the identities of American citizens, then helped foreign IT workers use those identities to pose as Americans and gain employment at US companies, according to prosecutors. Ms Chapman has been charged with nine counts of conspiracy to defraud the US. Investigators said the ""staggering"" scheme used the stolen identities of 60 people, and generated nearly $7m (£5.5m) in funds that were sent back to North Korea, possibly to contribute to the country's weapons programme. The scheme - involving some 300 US companies - allegedly started in October 2020. According to the indictment, the workers were ""highly skilled information technology (IT) workers."" The companies, which were unaware of the scheme, were not identified, but officials said they included several Fortune 500 companies, as well as a major TV network, indicta defence company, a ""premier"" Silicon Valley tech company and an ""iconic"" American auto manufacturer. Ms Chapman, 49, allegedly ran a ""laptop farm"" from her home, where she would log into laptops issued by the companies so that it appeared the North Korean workers from other countries were physically in the US. She would then help the IT workers remotely connect to the laptops, and also help them to receive their wages from the companies, according to the 57-page charging document. The indictment says ""in exchange, Chapman charged monthly fees to the overseas IT workers for her services, enriching herself off the scheme"". She also is accused of unsuccessfully trying to procure employment at US government agencies. ""The charges in this case should be a wakeup call for American companies and government agencies that employ remote IT workers,"" said Nicole Argentieri, head of the Justice Department's Criminal Division. ""These crimes benefitted the North Korean government, giving it a revenue stream and, in some instances, proprietary information stolen by the co-conspirators."" Officials said Ms Chapman was contacted in March 2020 by an unknown individual who asked her to ""be the US face"" of their company. Ms Chapman is charged alongside North Korean citizens Jiho Han, Chunji Jin, Haoran Xu who remain at large. All three have been tied to North Koreans Munitions Industry Department, according to the US State Department, which notes that the organisation handles ballistic missile and weapons production for North Korea. The US state department has offered $5m for ""information that leads to the disruption"" of North Korean money laundering and financial fraud crimes. Ms Chapman was arrested on Thursday in Arizona. It is unclear if she has hired a lawyer who could speak on her behalf. ",BBC,17/05/2024,"['US prosecutors have accused an American woman of helping North Koreans find remote jobs in the US and then send their wages back to North Korea.', 'Christina Chapman is charged alongside three North Korean nationals with participating in the elaborate plot.', 'The Arizona resident allegedly stole the identities of American citizens, then helped foreign IT workers use those identities to pose as Americans and gain employment at US companies, according to prosecutors.', 'Ms Chapman has been charged with nine counts of conspiracy to defraud the US.', 'Investigators said the ""staggering"" scheme used the stolen identities of 60 people, and generated nearly $7m (£5.5m) in funds that were sent back to North Korea, possibly to contribute to the country\'s weapons programme.', 'The scheme - involving some 300 US companies - allegedly started in October 2020.', 'According to the indictment, the workers were ""highly skilled information technology (IT) workers.""', 'The companies, which were unaware of the scheme, were not identified, but officials said they included several Fortune 500 companies, as well as a major TV network, indicta defence company, a ""premier"" Silicon Valley tech company and an ""iconic"" American auto manufacturer.', 'Ms Chapman, 49, allegedly ran a ""laptop farm"" from her home, where she would log into laptops issued by the companies so that it appeared the North Korean workers from other countries were physically in the US.', 'She would then help the IT workers remotely connect to the laptops, and also help them to receive their wages from the companies, according to the 57-page charging document.', 'The indictment says ""in exchange, Chapman charged monthly fees to the overseas IT workers for her services, enriching herself off the scheme"".', 'She also is accused of unsuccessfully trying to procure employment at US government agencies. ""', 'The charges in this case should be a wakeup call for American companies and government agencies that employ remote IT workers,"" said Nicole Argentieri, head of the Justice Department\'s Criminal Division. ""', 'These crimes benefitted the North Korean government, giving it a revenue stream and, in some instances, proprietary information stolen by the co-conspirators.""', 'Officials said Ms Chapman was contacted in March 2020 by an unknown individual who asked her to ""be the US face"" of their company.', 'Ms Chapman is charged alongside North Korean citizens Jiho Han, Chunji Jin, Haoran Xu who remain at large.', 'All three have been tied to North Koreans Munitions Industry Department, according to the US State Department, which notes that the organisation handles ballistic missile and weapons production for North Korea.', 'The US state department has offered $5m for ""information that leads to the disruption"" of North Korean money laundering and financial fraud crimes.', 'Ms Chapman was arrested on Thursday in Arizona.', 'It is unclear if she has hired a lawyer who could speak on her behalf.']",-0.1454819663219695,"She would then help the IT workers remotely connect to the laptops, and also help them to receive their wages from the companies, according to the 57-page charging document.","The US state department has offered $5m for ""information that leads to the disruption"" of North Korean money laundering and financial fraud crimes.",0.999517560005188,"These crimes benefitted the North Korean government, giving it a revenue stream and, in some instances, proprietary information stolen by the co-conspirators.""",,2024-05-20 Ryanair sees rises in air fares easing over summer,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cd11x3lqj20o,2024-05-20T06:50:37.177Z,"No-frills airline Ryanair has said fares during the peak summer season are set to be unchanged or only ""modestly"" higher than last year. The carrier said while it expected ""strong"" demand for flights in July and August, airfares had been growing slower than expected recently. Airline boss Michael O'Leary said this could be down to a ""recessionary feel around Europe"". His comments came as Ryanair said profits for the year to March jumped 34% to €1.92bn (£1.64bn) after fares rose by a fifth. Demand for air travel has been increasing steadily ever since the Covid pandemic restrictions were lifted. In the past few weeks, British Airways owner IAG and EasyJet have both been forecasting strong demand for flights this summer. Ryanair said it carried 183.7 million passengers in the year to March, with average fares up 21% to €49.80. It said it had seen record trading last summer, and strong traffic over Easter in March. However, this was offset by a fall in numbers at the end of last year, after Ryanair flights were removed from several online travel agents. The airline said bookings for this summer were ahead of last year, although fares were not as high as it had expected. ""We still see reasonable strength in July and August bookings, the peak summer months, but April, May and June are a little bit weaker than we had originally expected,"" Mr O'Leary said. ""We remain cautiously optimistic that peak summer 2024 fares will be flat to modestly ahead of summer 2023,"" he added “It’s a little bit surprising that pricing hasn’t been stronger and we’re not sure if that’s kind of consumer sentiment , or recessionary feel around Europe."" Ryanair, which has been hampered in its expansion plans by delays to the delivery of new Boeing planes, said it could carry 198-200 million customers this year if the new aircraft are delivered on schedule. It said there was a risk the deliveries could ""slip further"", but Mr O'Leary said he thought this was ""unlikely"". However, the airline said it would be short of about 23 Boeing 737s that were due to arrive by the end of July. Mr O'Leary said Ryanair would receive compensation from Boeing for the delays, although it would be ""modest"" and did not reflect the cost to the airline of having to cut back its growth plans. The carrier said it was continuing to work closely with the aerospace giant to improve quality and increase the pace of deliveries. Boeing's planes have come under intense focus once again after the company was plunged into a crisis in January when a panel on one of its aircraft blew out in mid-air. Scrutiny over Boeing's plane manufacturing processes has led to a slowdown in deliveries. Boeing boss Dave Calhoun has said he will step down from the planemaker at the end of the year. Mr O'Leary said Ryanair welcomed Boeing's management changes, and ""already we’re seeing improved quality on our aircraft deliveries but sadly not yet enough progress on accelerating those deliveries"". Ryanair did not give any profit forecasts for the current year, saying that was ""heavily dependent"" upon avoiding adverse events such as the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, extensive air traffic control disruptions or further Boeing delivery delays. ",BBC,20/05/2024,"['No-frills airline Ryanair has said fares during the peak summer season are set to be unchanged or only ""modestly"" higher than last year.', 'The carrier said while it expected ""strong"" demand for flights in July and August, airfares had been growing slower than expected recently.', 'Airline boss Michael O\'Leary said this could be down to a ""recessionary feel around Europe"".', 'His comments came as Ryanair said profits for the year to March jumped 34% to €1.92bn (£1.64bn) after fares rose by a fifth.', 'Demand for air travel has been increasing steadily ever since the Covid pandemic restrictions were lifted.', 'In the past few weeks, British Airways owner IAG and EasyJet have both been forecasting strong demand for flights this summer.', 'Ryanair said it carried 183.7 million passengers in the year to March, with average fares up 21% to €49.80.', 'It said it had seen record trading last summer, and strong traffic over Easter in March.', 'However, this was offset by a fall in numbers at the end of last year, after Ryanair flights were removed from several online travel agents.', 'The airline said bookings for this summer were ahead of last year, although fares were not as high as it had expected. ""', 'We still see reasonable strength in July and August bookings, the peak summer months, but April, May and June are a little bit weaker than we had originally expected,"" Mr O\'Leary said. ""', 'We remain cautiously optimistic that peak summer 2024 fares will be flat to modestly ahead of summer 2023,"" he added “It’s a little bit surprising that pricing hasn’t been stronger and we’re not sure if that’s kind of consumer sentiment , or recessionary feel around Europe.""', 'Ryanair, which has been hampered in its expansion plans by delays to the delivery of new Boeing planes, said it could carry 198-200 million customers this year if the new aircraft are delivered on schedule.', 'It said there was a risk the deliveries could ""slip further"", but Mr O\'Leary said he thought this was ""unlikely"".', 'However, the airline said it would be short of about 23 Boeing 737s that were due to arrive by the end of July.', 'Mr O\'Leary said Ryanair would receive compensation from Boeing for the delays, although it would be ""modest"" and did not reflect the cost to the airline of having to cut back its growth plans.', 'The carrier said it was continuing to work closely with the aerospace giant to improve quality and increase the pace of deliveries.', ""Boeing's planes have come under intense focus once again after the company was plunged into a crisis in January when a panel on one of its aircraft blew out in mid-air."", ""Scrutiny over Boeing's plane manufacturing processes has led to a slowdown in deliveries."", 'Boeing boss Dave Calhoun has said he will step down from the planemaker at the end of the year.', 'Mr O\'Leary said Ryanair welcomed Boeing\'s management changes, and ""already we’re seeing improved quality on our aircraft deliveries but sadly not yet enough progress on accelerating those deliveries"".', 'Ryanair did not give any profit forecasts for the current year, saying that was ""heavily dependent"" upon avoiding adverse events such as the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, extensive air traffic control disruptions or further Boeing delivery delays.']",0.022353811237513,"We remain cautiously optimistic that peak summer 2024 fares will be flat to modestly ahead of summer 2023,"" he added “It’s a little bit surprising that pricing hasn’t been stronger and we’re not sure if that’s kind of consumer sentiment , or recessionary feel around Europe.""","Ryanair did not give any profit forecasts for the current year, saying that was ""heavily dependent"" upon avoiding adverse events such as the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, extensive air traffic control disruptions or further Boeing delivery delays.",0.1990700244903564,"Ryanair said it carried 183.7 million passengers in the year to March, with average fares up 21% to €49.80.",Scrutiny over Boeing's plane manufacturing processes has led to a slowdown in deliveries.,2024-05-20 Disney+ will stream Caitlin Clark's WNBA debut in the platform's first live sports event,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/14/disney-to-stream-caitlin-clarks-wnba-debut-with-indiana-fever.html,2024-05-15T12:13:02+0000,"In this articleThe Women's National Basketball Association regular season opens Tuesday night with breakout star Caitlin Clark making her debut as point guard for the Indiana Fever. The game will be streamed on Disney+, the service's first live sports event.As the NCAA's all-time leading scorer for both men's and women's basketball, Clark helped draw a record 18.9 million viewers to the Women's March Madness National Championship game last month. The former Iowa star was drafted as the No. 1 pick on April 15, which alone led 2.45 million viewers to tune in, surpassing the league's previous high for a draft by 307%.Following Clark's debut at 7:30 p.m. ET against the Connecticut Sun, Disney+ will stream the Phoenix Mercury vs. Las Vegas Aces matchup. Disney+ has previously streamed animated simulcasts of sporting events using cartoon characters in place of the athletes, but Tuesday's doubleheader is the first instance of a live sports game streamed on the platform.Disney nearly turned a profit in its streaming unit for the first time during its fiscal second quarter, the company reported last week. The entertainment giant has been increasingly leaning on sports streaming to drive viewership.Disney's ESPN is planning to launch a full direct-to-consumer streaming product in fall 2025 that will allow consumers to subscribe to ESPN without cable.It is also partnering with Warner Bros. Discovery and Fox Corp. to offer a sports streaming service that they expect to launch this fall, the companies announced in February.Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery's exclusive TV rights for NBA games is currently under negotiation.The WNBA's existing media rights deal expires in 2025. The deal is reported to be worth roughly $60 million, and WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert said she expects that to double when the rights are renegotiated.Patrick Rishe, director of the Sports Business Program at Washington University's Olin Business School, said the WNBA debut on Tuesday could be a ""watershed moment for the league,"" and the choice to have the game on Disney+ will be critical for the league's ""key demographic"" of families and younger people.""They covet younger fans, and this is how younger fans view their sports these days — it is through streaming,"" Rishe told CNBC's ""Worldwide Exchange"" on Tuesday.""I certainly see some parallels between the potential of Caitlin Clark and her power in terms of increasing the reach of the WNBA and Lionel Messi, of all people, and what is going on with Apple TV,"" Rishe added, in reference to the soccer superstar's 10-year deal with Major League Soccer, and the league's streaming deal with Apple TV.",CNBC,15/05/2024,"[""In this articleThe Women's National Basketball Association regular season opens Tuesday night with breakout star Caitlin Clark making her debut as point guard for the Indiana Fever."", ""The game will be streamed on Disney+, the service's first live sports event."", ""As the NCAA's all-time leading scorer for both men's and women's basketball, Clark helped draw a record 18.9 million viewers to the Women's March Madness National Championship game last month."", 'The former Iowa star was drafted as the No.', ""1 pick on April 15, which alone led 2.45 million viewers to tune in, surpassing the league's previous high for a draft by 307%.Following Clark's debut at 7:30 p.m. ET against the Connecticut Sun, Disney+ will stream the Phoenix Mercury vs. Las Vegas Aces matchup."", ""Disney+ has previously streamed animated simulcasts of sporting events using cartoon characters in place of the athletes, but Tuesday's doubleheader is the first instance of a live sports game streamed on the platform."", 'Disney nearly turned a profit in its streaming unit for the first time during its fiscal second quarter, the company reported last week.', 'The entertainment giant has been increasingly leaning on sports streaming to drive viewership.', ""Disney's ESPN is planning to launch a full direct-to-consumer streaming product in fall 2025 that will allow consumers to subscribe to ESPN without cable."", 'It is also partnering with Warner Bros. Discovery and Fox Corp. to offer a sports streaming service that they expect to launch this fall, the companies announced in February.', ""Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery's exclusive TV rights for NBA games is currently under negotiation."", ""The WNBA's existing media rights deal expires in 2025."", 'The deal is reported to be worth roughly $60 million, and WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert said she expects that to double when the rights are renegotiated.', 'Patrick Rishe, director of the Sports Business Program at Washington University\'s Olin Business School, said the WNBA debut on Tuesday could be a ""watershed moment for the league,"" and the choice to have the game on Disney+ will be critical for the league\'s ""key demographic"" of families and younger people.', '""They covet younger fans, and this is how younger fans view their sports these days — it is through streaming,"" Rishe told CNBC\'s ""Worldwide Exchange"" on Tuesday.', '""I certainly see some parallels between the potential of Caitlin Clark and her power in terms of increasing the reach of the WNBA and Lionel Messi, of all people, and what is going on with Apple TV,"" Rishe added, in reference to the soccer superstar\'s 10-year deal with Major League Soccer, and the league\'s streaming deal with Apple TV.']",0.0587261477209856,"Disney nearly turned a profit in its streaming unit for the first time during its fiscal second quarter, the company reported last week.","Patrick Rishe, director of the Sports Business Program at Washington University's Olin Business School, said the WNBA debut on Tuesday could be a ""watershed moment for the league,"" and the choice to have the game on Disney+ will be critical for the league's ""key demographic"" of families and younger people.",0.96605886220932,"Disney nearly turned a profit in its streaming unit for the first time during its fiscal second quarter, the company reported last week.",,2024-05-20 More OpenAI drama: Exec quits over concerns about focus on profit over safety,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/tech/openai-exec-exits-safety-concerns/index.html," Published 4:07 PM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","A departing OpenAI executive focused on safety is raising concerns about the company on his way out the door. Jan Leike, who resigned from his role leading the company’s “superalignment” team this week, said in a thread on X Friday that he disagreed with OpenAI leadership’s “core priorities” and had “reached a breaking point.” “Alignment” or “superalignment” are terms used in the artificial intelligence space to refer to work on training AI systems to operate within human needs and priorities. Leike joined OpenAI in 2021, and last summer the company announced he would co-lead the superalignment team focused on “scientific and technical breakthroughs to steer and control AI systems much smarter than us.” However, Leike said Friday that in recent months the team has been under-resourced and “sailing against the wind.” “Sometimes we were struggling for compute and it was getting harder and harder to get this crucial research done,” he said on X, adding that Thursday was his last day at the startup. “Building smarter-than-human machines is an inherently dangerous endeavor … But over the past years, safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products.” OpenAI CEO Sam Altman responded to Leike’s post saying the company is committed to AI safety. “(I)’m super appreciative of @janleike’s contributions to openai’s alignment research and safety culture, and very sad to see him leave,” Altman said on X. “(H)e’s right we have a lot more to do; we are committed to doing it. (I)’ll have a longer post in the next couple of days.” Leike’s exit, which he announced Wednesday, comes amid a broader leadership shuffle at OpenAI. His resignation followed an announcement on Tuesday by OpenAI co-founder and chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, who also helped lead the superalignment team, that he would leave the company. Sutskever said he was leaving to work on a “project that is very personally meaningful to me.” But his exit was notable given the central role he played in the dramatic firing — and return — of Altman last year, when he voted to remove Altman as chief executive and chairman of the board. CNN contributor Kara Swisher previously reported that Sutskever had been concerned that Altman was pushing AI technology “too far, too fast.” But days after Altman’s ouster, Sutskever had a change of heart: He signed an employee letter calling for the entire board to resign and for Altman to return. Still, questions about how — and how quickly — to develop and publicly release AI technology may have continued to cause tension within the company in the months after Altman regained control of the firm. The executive exits come after OpenAI announced this week that it would make its most powerful AI model yet, GPT-4o, available for free to the public through ChatGPT. The technology will make ChatGPT more like a digital personal assistant, capable of real-time spoken conversations. “I believe much more of our bandwidth should be spent getting ready for the next generations of models, on security, monitoring, preparedness, safety, adversarial robustness, (super)alignment, confidentiality, societal impact, and related topics,” Leike wrote in his X thread on Friday. “These problems are quite hard to get right, and I am concerned we aren’t on a trajectory to get there.” In the wake of Sutskever and Leike’s exits, OpenAI confirmed to CNN that in recent weeks it had begun to dissolve its superalignment team, and instead was integrating members of the team across its various research groups. A spokesperson for the company said that structure would help OpenAI better achieve its superalignment objectives. CNN’s Samantha Delouya contributed to this report.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['A departing OpenAI executive focused on safety is raising concerns about the company on his way out the door.', 'Jan Leike, who resigned from his role leading the company’s “superalignment” team this week, said in a thread on X Friday that he disagreed with OpenAI leadership’s “core priorities” and had “reached a breaking point.”', '“Alignment” or “superalignment” are terms used in the artificial intelligence space to refer to work on training AI systems to operate within human needs and priorities.', 'Leike joined OpenAI in 2021, and last summer the company announced he would co-lead the superalignment team focused on “scientific and technical breakthroughs to steer and control AI systems much smarter than us.”', 'However, Leike said Friday that in recent months the team has been under-resourced and “sailing against the wind.”', '“Sometimes we were struggling for compute and it was getting harder and harder to get this crucial research done,” he said on X, adding that Thursday was his last day at the startup. “', 'Building smarter-than-human machines is an inherently dangerous endeavor … But over the past years, safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products.”', 'OpenAI CEO Sam Altman responded to Leike’s post saying the company is committed to AI safety.', '“(I)’m super appreciative of @janleike’s contributions to openai’s alignment research and safety culture, and very sad to see him leave,” Altman said on X. “(H)e’s right we have a lot more to do; we are committed to doing it. (', 'I)’ll have a longer post in the next couple of days.”', 'Leike’s exit, which he announced Wednesday, comes amid a broader leadership shuffle at OpenAI.', 'His resignation followed an announcement on Tuesday by OpenAI co-founder and chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, who also helped lead the superalignment team, that he would leave the company.', 'Sutskever said he was leaving to work on a “project that is very personally meaningful to me.”', 'But his exit was notable given the central role he played in the dramatic firing — and return — of Altman last year, when he voted to remove Altman as chief executive and chairman of the board.', 'CNN contributor Kara Swisherpreviously reported that Sutskever had been concerned that Altman was pushing AI technology “too far, too fast.”', 'But days after Altman’s ouster, Sutskever had a change of heart: He signed an employee letter calling for the entire board to resign and for Altman to return.', 'Still, questions about how — and how quickly — to develop and publicly release AI technology may have continued to cause tension within the company in the months after Altman regained control of the firm.', 'The executive exits come after OpenAI announced this week that it would make its most powerful AI model yet, GPT-4o, available for free to the public through ChatGPT.', 'The technology will make ChatGPT more like a digital personal assistant, capable of real-time spoken conversations.', '“I believe much more of our bandwidth should be spent getting ready for the next generations of models, on security, monitoring, preparedness, safety, adversarial robustness, (super)alignment, confidentiality, societal impact, and related topics,” Leike wrote in his X thread on Friday. “', 'These problems are quite hard to get right, and I am concerned we aren’t on a trajectory to get there.”', 'In the wake of Sutskever and Leike’s exits, OpenAI confirmed to CNN that in recent weeks it had begun to dissolve its superalignment team, and instead was integrating members of the team across its various research groups.', 'A spokesperson for the company said that structure would help OpenAI better achieve its superalignment objectives.', 'CNN’s Samantha Delouya contributed to this report.']",0.1831292947028988,"“(I)’m super appreciative of @janleike’s contributions to openai’s alignment research and safety culture, and very sad to see him leave,” Altman said on X. “(H)e’s right we have a lot more to do; we are committed to doing it. (","These problems are quite hard to get right, and I am concerned we aren’t on a trajectory to get there.”",-0.5513206919034322,A spokesperson for the company said that structure would help OpenAI better achieve its superalignment objectives.,"However, Leike said Friday that in recent months the team has been under-resourced and “sailing against the wind.”",2024-05-20 Boeing shareholders re-elect departing CEO Calhoun to board,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/17/boeing-calhoun-reelected-shareholder-vote.html,2024-05-17T16:46:44+0000,"In this articleBoeing shareholders voted to re-elect the outgoing CEO Dave Calhoun to the board of directors, a preliminary tally on Friday showed, as he sought to reassure investors that the manufacturer is on the path to stability amid its latest safety crisis.Calhoun in March said he will step down by year's end, months after a door plug panel blew out midflight from a Boeing 737 Max 9, ushering in new scrutiny of the manufacturer's safety and quality control issues. Boeing also replaced its board chair and the head of its commercial airplane unit in the shakeup.Boeing's new chairman, Steve Mollenkopf, told shareholders at the company's annual meeting Friday that he has consulted with investors and customers on Calhoun's successor. Proxy advisor Glass Lewis had recommended that shareholders vote against Calhoun and two other board members.Boeing's latest problems have driven down deliveries of new aircraft, frustrating airline executives who have complained about having to change their flight schedules and scale back staffing. It has also further strained Boeing's relationship with its regulator, the Federal Aviation Administration, which has ramped up inspections of the manufacturer.Earlier this week, the Justice Department said Boeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected the company from criminal charges tied to the two fatal 737 Max crashes, opening Boeing up to potential U.S. prosecution.",CNBC,17/05/2024,"['In this articleBoeing shareholders voted to re-elect the outgoing CEO Dave Calhoun to the board of directors, a preliminary tally on Friday showed, as he sought to reassure investors that the manufacturer is on the path to stability amid its latest safety crisis.', ""Calhoun in March said he will step down by year's end, months after a door plug panel blew out midflight from a Boeing 737 Max 9, ushering in new scrutiny of the manufacturer's safety and quality control issues."", 'Boeing also replaced its board chair and the head of its commercial airplane unit in the shakeup.', ""Boeing's new chairman, Steve Mollenkopf, told shareholders at the company's annual meeting Friday that he has consulted with investors and customers on Calhoun's successor."", 'Proxy advisor Glass Lewis had recommended that shareholders vote against Calhoun and two other board members.', ""Boeing's latest problems have driven down deliveries of new aircraft, frustrating airline executives who have complained about having to change their flight schedules and scale back staffing."", ""It has also further strained Boeing's relationship with its regulator, the Federal Aviation Administration, which has ramped up inspections of the manufacturer."", 'Earlier this week, the Justice Department said Boeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected the company from criminal charges tied to the two fatal 737 Max crashes, opening Boeing up to potential U.S. prosecution.']",-0.1307499503462509,"Calhoun in March said he will step down by year's end, months after a door plug panel blew out midflight from a Boeing 737 Max 9, ushering in new scrutiny of the manufacturer's safety and quality control issues.","Earlier this week, the Justice Department said Boeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected the company from criminal charges tied to the two fatal 737 Max crashes, opening Boeing up to potential U.S. prosecution.",-0.2865927815437317,"Earlier this week, the Justice Department said Boeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected the company from criminal charges tied to the two fatal 737 Max crashes, opening Boeing up to potential U.S. prosecution.","Boeing's latest problems have driven down deliveries of new aircraft, frustrating airline executives who have complained about having to change their flight schedules and scale back staffing.",2024-05-20 "As their customers age, Macy's, Kohl's and Nordstrom are chasing younger shoppers",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/20/macys-kohls-nordstrom-earnings-department-stores-younger-shoppers.html,2024-05-20T17:56:33+0000,"In this articleDepartment stores are aging — and so are their customers.For more than a century, the stores won over multiple generations with a promise to sell shoppers a wide variety of everything. For many millennial and Gen Z consumers, that hasn't been enough — especially as they discover items on social media and specialty retailers, big-box stores and online players steal away sales.Department stores like Macy's, Kohl's and Nordstrom face an existential crisis, as they try to persuade investors to bet on their futures while sales slow and their core customers age. Harsh scrutiny from Wall Street has contributed to a fresh attempt by Nordstrom to take the company private, and a bid by activist investors to take over Macy's and turn it into a private company. Kohl's, too, has been the target of activist investors in the past few years.Oliver Chen, a retail analyst at TD Cowen, said attracting younger customers has become more urgent, since the retailers have ""lost so much ground already.""""When you're a department store, you need to — and you should — be catering to younger and older,"" he said.Customer data illustrates the challenge for the retailers: At Kohl's, 40% of customers are baby boomers, according to Numerator, a market research firm that tracks retail trends and sales patterns with a panel of 150,000 U.S. consumers that's balanced to represent the population. At Macy's, more than a third of customers — 36% — are boomers. (Macy's data includes just its namesake stores and website, not Bloomingdale's and beauty chain Bluemercury.)Baby boomers are age 60 or older, according to Numerator's definition. The firm defines Gen X as between ages 43 and 59. Numerator puts millennials in the age 29 to 42 range, and Gen Z between 18 and 28, since it only collects data from consumers 18 or older.Nordstrom is the only one of the three that has a larger base of millennial and Gen X shoppers than baby boomers, with boomers accounting for 25% of its customer base. Its customer data includes both its namesake stores and its off-price retail chain, Nordstrom Rack, which has been known to draw in younger, fashion-forward customers hunting for deals.All three department stores have announced plans to woo new customers — including younger ones. Yet they have shared weak outlooks for the fiscal year, calling for little, if any, year-over-year sales growth.Chen said the retailers are paying more attention to the problem, since Macy's and Kohl's both have new CEOs and all three are trying to improve their private brands. The lines can help a retailer stand out because they are exclusive and often priced lower than national brands.Aging customers aren't department stores' only hurdle. The chains, like other retailers, have struggled with foot traffic and sales as consumers spend less on clothing, bedding and other discretionary items while more of their money goes toward everyday items because of inflation.To attract younger shoppers, Kohl's is adding trendier clothing for teens, opening more Sephora shops and bulking up its baby department.In an interview with CNBC in late March, CEO Tom Kingsbury said department stores, including Kohl's, have relied too much on coupons to get customers through their doors. That formula doesn't work for millennial and Gen Z shoppers, he said. They want compelling merchandise and clear pricing — things they're finding at off-price stores like T.J. Maxx instead.Led by Kingsbury, Kohl's is trying to capitalize on life stages that tend to spark purchases, such as decorating an apartment for the first time or having a baby. The retailer plans to add Babies R Us shops to about 200 of its stores in the fall. It is now carrying more home goods, such as lighting and wall art.Kohl's has also used Sephora shops, which it is expanding to all stores, to draw in younger shoppers and try to nudge them to other parts of the store.""When they come in for Sephora, we want to make sure we can give them product they want as well,"" Kingsbury said.Still, Kohl's doesn't expect to see immediate results from the moves. It said in March that it anticipates net sales to range from a 1% decrease to a 1% increase for the full year, and comparable sales to range from flat to 2% higher.With a new CEO at the top, Macy's wants to refresh its namesake brand and shutter stores that have dragged down the company's sales.It plans to close more than a quarter of its approximately 500 namesake stores by early 2027. At the same time, Macy's is trying to go where younger shoppers are, including suburban strip malls and beauty aisles.The company plans to open up to 30 of its smaller off-mall Macy's stores over the next two years. The locations are roughly one-fifth the size of its traditional mall stores and typically next to grocers, big-box stores and off-price retailers, which have steadier foot traffic.It's also opening more Bloomingdale's stores and more locations of Bluemercury, its beauty chain — and taking steps to woo younger customers in the process.Macy's CEO Tony Spring, who stepped into the role in February, previously led Bloomingdale's, which carries luxury brands but also has popular private labels like clothing brand Aqua. It's also known for unique customer experiences, such as limited-time events or collections that tap into pop culture moments like the ""Barbie"" movie.He's hinted more of that is coming to Macy's. The company has debuted new, exclusive clothing brands and given others a makeover. It's trying to make Macy's more of an attraction, including by having a play area in Toys R Us shops within the stores or cocktails inside of Bloomie's, its smaller, off-mall version of Bloomingdale's.Despite efforts to jolt sales, the company's forecast is muted: Macy's expects full-year net sales to range between $22.2 billion and $22.9 billion, down from $23.09 billion in the prior year. It expects comparable sales, which take out the impact of store openings and closures, to range from a decline of about 1.5% to a gain of 1.5% compared with the year-ago period on an owned-plus-licensed basis and including third-party marketplace sales.One of the dilemmas for Macy's? Gen Z and millennial shoppers aren't as loyal, TD Cowen's Chen said. They shop high and low, buying a luxury handbag one day and an outfit from Target, Costco or Zara another.""You can actually look better for cheaper now,"" he said.Compared with its department store rivals, Nordstrom has had more success with younger shoppers.Some of that boils down to what the Seattle-based retailer carries: Nordstrom has been quicker to sign deals with hot brands and direct-to-consumer names, such as Skims, Kim Kardashian's shapewear company; and Beis, the handbag and luggage brand started by actress Shay Mitchell. It launched Australian fashion brand Princess Polly in January and timed the debut of millennial-focused fashion brand Nasty Gal with an activation in Los Angeles coinciding with the Coachella music and arts festival.Another advantage for Nordstrom? Most of its stores are Nordstrom Rack locations, off-price stores that may have a friendlier price point for younger shoppers.Still, CEO Erik Nordstrom said on the company's March earnings call that the retailer wants to do better. He said it's starting to a see a turnaround with the younger customer, ""which is an area we have a multiyear plan to improve.""Nordstrom is trying to increase its fashion-forward merchandise in a new way, too. About a month ago, it rolled out a third-party marketplace that allows it to sell a wider variety of items without taking on the risk of owning the inventory. The marketplace approach follows the model that Amazon and more recently, Walmart, has used to bulk up its online offerings.With the marketplace, Nordstrom has said it will double or triple the number of items sold through its website and app. Macy's, too, has begun using a third-party marketplace to add more items and brands.Like Macy's and Kohl's, though, Nordstrom has a lackluster forecast: It expects full-year revenue, including retail sales and credit cards, will range from a 2% decline to a 1% gain compared with the previous fiscal year, which had an additional week.Marketplaces can help department stores, as they're under pressure to tightly manage inventory yet appeal to what different age groups want, said Christine Barton, a senior partner who researches consumer habits for the Boston Consulting Group.Cost pressures can cause a retailer to place safer bets and order the same kind of merchandise that they always carry.""You take away some of that newness,"" she said. ""You going back to more tried and true brands or products and so that becomes a bit of a self-reinforcing prophecy in terms of that younger consumer.""Breaking away from those old habits is something that department stores will need to do if they want to become a staple for younger generations — and stay relevant for decades more, she said.",CNBC,20/05/2024,"['In this articleDepartment stores are aging — and so are their customers.', 'For more than a century, the stores won over multiple generations with a promise to sell shoppers a wide variety of everything.', ""For many millennial and Gen Z consumers, that hasn't been enough — especially as they discover items on social media and specialty retailers, big-box stores and online players steal away sales."", ""Department stores like Macy's, Kohl's and Nordstrom face an existential crisis, as they try to persuade investors to bet on their futures while sales slow and their core customers age."", ""Harsh scrutiny from Wall Street has contributed to a fresh attempt by Nordstrom to take the company private, and a bid by activist investors to take over Macy's and turn it into a private company."", ""Kohl's, too, has been the target of activist investors in the past few years."", 'Oliver Chen, a retail analyst at TD Cowen, said attracting younger customers has become more urgent, since the retailers have ""lost so much ground already.', '""""When you\'re a department store, you need to — and you should — be catering to younger and older,"" he said.', ""Customer data illustrates the challenge for the retailers: At Kohl's, 40% of customers are baby boomers, according to Numerator, a market research firm that tracks retail trends and sales patterns with a panel of 150,000 U.S. consumers that's balanced to represent the population."", ""At Macy's, more than a third of customers — 36% — are boomers. ("", ""Macy's data includes just its namesake stores and website, not Bloomingdale's and beauty chain Bluemercury.)Baby boomers are age 60 or older, according to Numerator's definition."", 'The firm defines Gen X as between ages 43 and 59.', 'Numerator puts millennials in the age 29 to 42 range, and Gen Z between 18 and 28, since it only collects data from consumers 18 or older.', 'Nordstrom is the only one of the three that has a larger base of millennial and Gen X shoppers than baby boomers, with boomers accounting for 25% of its customer base.', 'Its customer data includes both its namesake stores and its off-price retail chain, Nordstrom Rack, which has been known to draw in younger, fashion-forward customers hunting for deals.', 'All three department stores have announced plans to woo new customers — including younger ones.', 'Yet they have shared weak outlooks for the fiscal year, calling for little, if any, year-over-year sales growth.', ""Chen said the retailers are paying more attention to the problem, since Macy's and Kohl's both have new CEOs and all three are trying to improve their private brands."", 'The lines can help a retailer stand out because they are exclusive and often priced lower than national brands.', ""Aging customers aren't department stores' only hurdle."", 'The chains, like other retailers, have struggled with foot traffic and sales as consumers spend less on clothing, bedding and other discretionary items while more of their money goes toward everyday items because of inflation.', ""To attract younger shoppers, Kohl's is adding trendier clothing for teens, opening more Sephora shops and bulking up its baby department."", ""In an interview with CNBC in late March, CEO Tom Kingsbury said department stores, including Kohl's, have relied too much on coupons to get customers through their doors."", ""That formula doesn't work for millennial and Gen Z shoppers, he said."", ""They want compelling merchandise and clear pricing — things they're finding at off-price stores like T.J. Maxx instead."", ""Led by Kingsbury, Kohl's is trying to capitalize on life stages that tend to spark purchases, such as decorating an apartment for the first time or having a baby."", 'The retailer plans to add Babies R Us shops to about 200 of its stores in the fall.', 'It is now carrying more home goods, such as lighting and wall art.', ""Kohl's has also used Sephora shops, which it is expanding to all stores, to draw in younger shoppers and try to nudge them to other parts of the store."", '""When they come in for Sephora, we want to make sure we can give them product they want as well,"" Kingsbury said.', ""Still, Kohl's doesn't expect to see immediate results from the moves."", 'It said in March that it anticipates net sales to range from a 1% decrease to a 1% increase for the full year, and comparable sales to range from flat to 2% higher.', ""With a new CEO at the top, Macy's wants to refresh its namesake brand and shutter stores that have dragged down the company's sales."", 'It plans to closemore than a quarterof its approximately 500 namesake stores by early 2027.', ""At the same time, Macy's is trying to go where younger shoppers are, including suburban strip malls and beauty aisles."", ""The company plans to open up to 30 of its smaller off-mall Macy's storesover the next two years."", 'The locations are roughly one-fifth the size of its traditional mall stores and typically next to grocers, big-box stores and off-price retailers, which have steadier foot traffic.', ""It's also opening more Bloomingdale's stores and more locations of Bluemercury, its beauty chain — and taking steps to woo younger customers in the process."", ""Macy's CEO Tony Spring, who stepped into the role in February, previously led Bloomingdale's, which carries luxury brands but also has popular private labels like clothing brand Aqua."", 'It\'s also known for unique customer experiences, such as limited-time events or collections that tap into pop culture moments like the ""Barbie"" movie.', ""He's hinted more of that is coming to Macy's."", 'The company has debuted new, exclusive clothing brands and given others a makeover.', ""It's trying to make Macy's more of an attraction, including by having a play area in Toys R Us shops within the stores or cocktails inside of Bloomie's, its smaller, off-mall version of Bloomingdale's."", ""Despite efforts to jolt sales, the company's forecast is muted: Macy's expects full-year net sales to range between $22.2 billion and $22.9 billion, down from $23.09 billion in the prior year."", 'It expects comparable sales, which take out the impact of store openings and closures, to range from a decline of about 1.5% to a gain of 1.5% compared with the year-ago period on an owned-plus-licensed basis and including third-party marketplace sales.', ""One of the dilemmas for Macy's?"", ""Gen Z and millennial shoppers aren't as loyal, TD Cowen's Chen said."", 'They shop high and low, buying a luxury handbag one day and an outfit from Target, Costco or Zara another.', '""You can actually look better for cheaper now,"" he said.', 'Compared with its department store rivals, Nordstrom has had more success with younger shoppers.', ""Some of that boils down to what the Seattle-based retailer carries: Nordstrom has been quicker to sign deals with hot brands and direct-to-consumer names, such as Skims, Kim Kardashian's shapewear company; and Beis, the handbag and luggage brand started by actress Shay Mitchell."", 'It launched Australian fashion brand Princess Polly in January and timed the debut of millennial-focused fashion brand Nasty Gal with an activation in Los Angeles coinciding with the Coachella music and arts festival.', 'Another advantage for Nordstrom?', 'Most of its stores are Nordstrom Rack locations, off-price stores that may have a friendlier price point for younger shoppers.', ""Still, CEO Erik Nordstrom said on the company's March earnings call that the retailer wants to do better."", 'He said it\'s starting to a see a turnaround with the younger customer, ""which is an area we have a multiyear plan to improve.', '""Nordstrom is trying to increase its fashion-forward merchandise in a new way, too.', 'About a month ago, it rolled out a third-party marketplace that allows it to sell a wider variety of items without taking on the risk of owning the inventory.', 'The marketplace approach follows the model that Amazon and more recently, Walmart, has used to bulk up its online offerings.', 'With the marketplace, Nordstrom has said it will double or triple the number of items sold through its website and app.', ""Macy's, too, has begun using a third-party marketplace to add more items and brands."", ""Like Macy's and Kohl's, though, Nordstrom has a lackluster forecast: It expects full-year revenue, including retail sales and credit cards, will range from a 2% decline to a 1% gain compared with the previous fiscal year, which had an additional week."", ""Marketplaces can help department stores, as they're under pressure to tightly manage inventory yet appeal to what different age groups want, said Christine Barton, a senior partner who researches consumer habits for the Boston Consulting Group."", 'Cost pressures can cause a retailer to place safer bets and order the same kind of merchandise that they always carry.', '""You take away some of that newness,"" she said. ""', 'You going back to more tried and true brands or products and so that becomes a bit of a self-reinforcing prophecy in terms of that younger consumer.', '""Breaking away from those old habits is something that department stores will need to do if they want to become a staple for younger generations — and stay relevant for decades more, she said.']",0.2190840118688906,"Like Macy's and Kohl's, though, Nordstrom has a lackluster forecast: It expects full-year revenue, including retail sales and credit cards, will range from a 2% decline to a 1% gain compared with the previous fiscal year, which had an additional week.","For many millennial and Gen Z consumers, that hasn't been enough — especially as they discover items on social media and specialty retailers, big-box stores and online players steal away sales.",0.0798774834336905,"He said it's starting to a see a turnaround with the younger customer, ""which is an area we have a multiyear plan to improve.","Like Macy's and Kohl's, though, Nordstrom has a lackluster forecast: It expects full-year revenue, including retail sales and credit cards, will range from a 2% decline to a 1% gain compared with the previous fiscal year, which had an additional week.",2024-05-20 3 ways Apple’s monopoly lawsuit could change the iPhone experience for fans,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/tech/apples-iphone-changes-lawsuit/index.html," Published 6:30 AM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","When Apple launched its first Mac computer in 1984, with its iconic Mac smiley-face “hello” greeting, it wanted to differentiate itself in the fledgling PC market. The Mac was approachable with its friendly, innovative design – Apple’s way of setting the Mac apart in the confusing PC landscape. That consumer-friendly mantra still exists today, with Apple carefully curating an easy-breezy yet controlled user experience across its products, including the billions of iPhones used around the world. But the Biden administration believes Apple took that too far. On Thursday, the Department of Justice sued Apple for illegally monopolizing the smartphone market. In a press conference, the government provided a long list of how Apple has allegedly squashed competition with restrictive app store terms, high fees and its “walled-garden” approach, restricting how third-party companies interact with its brands and services. The company denied the lawsuit’s allegations and said it plans to fight them. Apple added that the lawsuit could empower the government “to take a heavy hand in designing people’s technology.” But if successful, the lawsuit could ripple across Apple’s products and services. Although the suit could take years to play out, here’s a closer look what it may eventually mean for iPhone users: If found liable, the company could be forced to change a number of things. One such change is how iPhone users could get greater access to “super apps” that have been largely restricted before. The term refers to one-stop-shop apps that allow for messaging, ordering food, payment processing and other capabilities all within one platform. According to Dipanjan Chatterjee, a principal analyst at market research firm Forrester, super apps most threaten Apple’s preeminence in the lives of its customers. “An offering like WeChat, dubbed China’s everything app, can provide an alternative to the Apple ecosystem for people to communicate, bank, share memories, talk to businesses and more,” he said. “What Apple fears most is becoming irrelevant to its customers.” At the same time, super apps like WeChat are created by larger companies and could, therefore, put some smaller companies at a disadvantage. And the concept hasn’t been welcomed much in the US anyway. The US government, however, could argue that lack of interest may be due to Apple’s high share of the smartphone market and its resistance to offer super apps in its store, Chatterjee said. Apple may also be required to offer more support for cross-platform messaging, an issue the company previously said it’s already working on. The company lets iPhone users send high-quality photos and videos to one another, but similar texts to Android phones are slower and grainy. It also maintains those messages in green bubbles, creating a kind of class divide, critics argue. In November, the company said it will add new features, such as read receipts, typing indicators, better support for group chats and higher quality media sharing of images and videos, across platforms to help close the gap. Apple’s move to add support for the standard called RCS (rich communication services) is intended to roll out later this year. RCS is considered the replacement to alternatives such as SMS, or short messaging service, and can work over both Wi-Fi and mobile data. The change followed pressure from both regulators and competitors to more seamlessly work across operating systems. The European Union’s Digital Markets Act, for example, requires companies to make their key services interoperable between platforms. The US government could require the same. Another likely change is how hardware from other companies, such as smartwatches, will interact with the Apple range of devices and software, including the iPhone and Apple’s services like Fitness+. The company has also required Apple Watch users to own iOS devices as a way to keep them locked into its existing ecosystem. Chatterjee said making this change would have both positives and negatives. “The net result would reside somewhere along the spectrum of access to more and cheaper options but also the devaluation of the customer experience that is so highly prized by Apple’s customers,” he said. The Biden administration has also taken issue with Apple’s lack of support for mobile cloud services. Loosening this could allow users to access games and other cloud-based apps without having to pay for pricey hardware. The DOJ lawsuit claims Apple’s behavior has illegally hindered competition, kept its customers locked into its products and prevented other companies from innovating. Although the Biden administration will have to prove these harms, some critics say any potential changes Apple could make will negatively impact the user experience. David McQueen, a research director at ABI Research, said he recognizes that the content and applications market should be open, and Apple needs to avoid monopolistic advantages that can restrict competition, push up prices or block innovation. But Apple’s success stems in part to its tight grip on its products and services, keeping things intuitive and seamless. “If Apple is forced to comply, it could potentially spell the end to the provision of this consistent and unified user experience, although by the same token, consumers will be open to a greater choice of apps and services, helping more developers and providers,” McQueen said. Chatterjee noted some people are drawn to the Apple family of products precisely because of the carefully managed ecosystem’s ease of use. Apple may have to work that much harder to preserve the integrity of its experience, but any changes probably won’t be enough to make customers to leave and go elsewhere. “The vast majority of Apple customers would probably be happier with some more choice and lower prices as long as it did not hamper their levels of customer experience, which is threatened by the less control Apple has over the experience,” Chatterjee said. But he added those currently outside of the Apple ecosystem will likely benefit by “plugging in opportunistically without having to go all in with Apple.”",CNN,26/03/2024,"['When Apple launched its first Mac computer in 1984, with its iconic Mac smiley-face “hello” greeting, it wanted to differentiate itself in the fledgling PC market.', 'The Mac was approachable with its friendly, innovative design – Apple’s way of setting the Mac apart in the confusing PC landscape.', 'That consumer-friendly mantra still exists today, with Apple carefully curating an easy-breezy yet controlled user experience across its products, including the billions of iPhones used around the world.', 'But the Biden administration believes Apple took that too far.', 'On Thursday, the Department of Justice sued Apple for illegally monopolizing the smartphone market.', 'In a press conference, the government provided a long list of how Apple has allegedly squashed competition with restrictive app store terms, high fees and its “walled-garden” approach, restricting how third-party companies interact with its brands and services.', 'The company denied the lawsuit’s allegations and said it plans to fight them.', 'Apple added that the lawsuit could empower the government “to take a heavy hand in designing people’s technology.”', 'But if successful, the lawsuit could ripple across Apple’s products and services.', 'Although the suit could take years to play out, here’s a closer look what it may eventually mean for iPhone users: If found liable, the company could be forced to change a number of things.', 'One such change is how iPhone users could get greater access to “super apps” that have been largely restricted before.', 'The term refers to one-stop-shop apps that allow for messaging, ordering food, payment processing and other capabilities all within one platform.', 'According to Dipanjan Chatterjee, a principal analyst at market research firm Forrester, super apps most threaten Apple’s preeminence in the lives of its customers.', '“An offering like WeChat, dubbed China’s everything app, can provide an alternative to the Apple ecosystem for people to communicate, bank, share memories, talk to businesses and more,” he said.', '“What Apple fears most is becoming irrelevant to its customers.”', 'At the same time, super apps like WeChat are created by larger companies and could, therefore, put some smaller companies at a disadvantage.', 'And the concept hasn’t been welcomed much in the US anyway.', 'The US government, however, could argue that lack of interest may be due to Apple’s high share of the smartphone market and its resistance to offer super apps in its store, Chatterjee said.', 'Apple may also be required to offer more support for cross-platform messaging, an issue the company previously said it’s already working on.', 'The company lets iPhone users send high-quality photos and videos to one another, but similar texts to Android phones are slower and grainy.', 'It also maintains those messages in green bubbles, creating a kind of class divide, critics argue.', 'In November, the company said it will add new features, such as read receipts, typing indicators, better support for group chats and higher quality media sharing of images and videos, across platforms to help close the gap.', 'Apple’s move to add support for the standard called RCS (rich communication services) is intended to roll out later this year.', 'RCS is considered the replacement to alternatives such as SMS, or short messaging service, and can work over both Wi-Fi and mobile data.', 'The change followed pressure from both regulators and competitors to more seamlessly work across operating systems.', 'The European Union’s Digital Markets Act, for example, requires companies to make their key services interoperable between platforms.', 'The US government could require the same.', 'Another likely change is how hardware from other companies, such as smartwatches, will interact with the Apple range of devices and software, including the iPhone and Apple’s services like Fitness+.', 'The company has also required Apple Watch users to own iOS devices as a way to keep them locked into its existing ecosystem.', 'Chatterjee said making this change would have both positives and negatives.', '“The net result would reside somewhere along the spectrum of access to more and cheaper options but also the devaluation of the customer experience that is so highly prized by Apple’s customers,” he said.', 'The Biden administration has also taken issue with Apple’s lack of support for mobile cloud services.', 'Loosening this could allow users to access games and other cloud-based apps without having to pay for pricey hardware.', 'The DOJ lawsuit claims Apple’s behavior has illegally hindered competition, kept its customers locked into its products and prevented other companies from innovating.', 'Although the Biden administration will have to prove these harms, some critics say any potential changes Apple could make will negatively impact the user experience.', 'David McQueen, a research director at ABI Research, said he recognizes that the content and applications market should be open, and Apple needs to avoid monopolistic advantages that can restrict competition, push up prices or block innovation.', 'But Apple’s success stems in part to its tight grip on its products and services, keeping things intuitive and seamless.', '“If Apple is forced to comply, it could potentially spell the end to the provision of this consistent and unified user experience, although by the same token, consumers will be open to a greater choice of apps and services, helping more developers and providers,” McQueen said.', 'Chatterjee noted some people are drawn to the Apple family of products precisely because of the carefully managed ecosystem’s ease of use.', 'Apple may have to work that much harder to preserve the integrity of its experience, but any changes probably won’t be enough to make customers to leave and go elsewhere.', '“The vast majority of Apple customers would probably be happier with some more choice and lower prices as long as it did not hamper their levels of customer experience, which is threatened by the less control Apple has over the experience,” Chatterjee said.', 'But he added those currently outside of the Apple ecosystem will likely benefit by “plugging in opportunistically without having to go all in with Apple.”']",0.2470050112228104,"In November, the company said it will add new features, such as read receipts, typing indicators, better support for group chats and higher quality media sharing of images and videos, across platforms to help close the gap.",The company denied the lawsuit’s allegations and said it plans to fight them.,-0.151834687590599,"“The vast majority of Apple customers would probably be happier with some more choice and lower prices as long as it did not hamper their levels of customer experience, which is threatened by the less control Apple has over the experience,” Chatterjee said.","The DOJ lawsuit claims Apple’s behavior has illegally hindered competition, kept its customers locked into its products and prevented other companies from innovating.",2024-05-20 "Netflix ad-supported tier has 40 million monthly users, nearly double previous count",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/15/netflix-ad-tier-has-40-million-users.html,2024-05-15T20:49:56+0000,"In this articleNetflix's cheaper, ad-supported tier has amassed 40 million global monthly active users, the company said Wednesday.That's nearly double the 23 million figure the streaming giant shared in January.The company also said it would launch its own advertising platform and no longer partner with Microsoft for that technology. The tech giant will remain a programmatic advertising partner, but will also be joined by other ad tech companies including The Trade Desk, Google Display & Video 360 and Magnite.Netflix will begin testing its ad tech platform in Canada later this year and plans to launch it in the U.S. by the end of the second quarter next year. The company aims to set the platform live everywhere by the end of 2025.The announcements came on Wednesday alongside Netflix's Upfront presentation, designed to woo advertisers. The streaming giant joined its media peers for the second time in making an annual pitch to lock in advertising for its platform.Earlier on Wednesday the company said it reached a deal to stream two National Football League games on Christmas Day this year, and at least one matchup on the same day in both 2025 and 2026.Netflix has the option to host one or two games in future years, with 2024 serving as a test, co-CEO Ted Sarandos told CNBC on Wednesday.It marks Netflix's first real foray into live sports after years of resistance. Sports, particularly the NFL, has proven to be the glue that keeps traditional TV intact — and has also proven to be a boost to streaming services.Terms of the NFL deal were not disclosed, but people familiar with the matter said Netflix will pay in the ballpark of $75 million per game. Spokespeople for the NFL and Netflix declined to comment.The streamer will hire its own announcers for the games and partner with existing production companies. Sarandos told CNBC he felt the NFL was the right fit because it matched the streamer's event strategy, allowing Netflix to effectively own the day.Netflix first introduced its ad-supported subscription plan in November 2022 as part of a wider effort to drive revenue amid slowing subscriber growth. That strategy included last year's password-sharing crackdown.Since then Netflix has been moving at breakneck speed to grow its ad-supported customer base, after admittedly being slow to join the pack. As part of that effort, Netflix got rid of its cheapest commercial-free plan in the U.S. and U.K.The company said Wednesday that 40% of all signups in countries that have the ad tier available are for that cheaper plan. Netflix now has 270 million total subscribers.For comparison, Disney's flagship service Disney+ has 117.6 million global subscribers, while Warner Bros. Discovery's streaming unit, led by Max, has 99.6 million. Those two companies recently announced they would offer a streaming bundle in order to prevent subscribers from dropping subscriptions and help them to make their streaming businesses profitable.Meanwhile, fledgling competitors are adding quarterly subscribers, but still trail. Comcast's Peacock had 34 million customers as of the most recent quarter, while Paramount Global's Paramount+ had 71 million.Netflix's monthly active ad-tier user figures come just a month after Netflix told investors it would no longer be providing quarterly subscriber number updates. The company said at the time that it was generating substantial profit and free cash flow and that its membership numbers were not the only factor in the company's growth. It said the metric lost significance after it started to offer multiple price points for memberships.Meanwhile, linear TV audiences continue to shrink and traditional media companies seek to gain a foothold in the streaming realm.Legacy media companies have suffered in recent quarters as the advertising market collapsed due to fears of a recession and surging interest rates. Companies typically pullback on advertising spending during times of economic uncertainty.But with a long runway ahead of it in the streaming business, Netflix has established itself as the leader in the segment as many other companies struggle to make their streaming platforms profitable.Disney executives recently referred to Netflix as the ""gold standard"" of streaming, and also noted that there's been additional supply in the ad market due to a competitor that recently entered the game, likely referencing Netflix.Media companies recently reported quarterly earnings, which showed the advertising market for traditional TV is still soft, albeit improving. Digital and streaming advertising, however, has been on the rebound.Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.",CNBC,15/05/2024,"[""In this articleNetflix's cheaper, ad-supported tier has amassed 40 million global monthly active users, the company said Wednesday."", ""That's nearly double the 23 million figure the streaming giant shared in January."", 'The company also said it would launch its own advertising platform and no longer partner with Microsoft for that technology.', 'The tech giant will remain a programmatic advertising partner, but will also be joined by other ad tech companies including The Trade Desk, Google Display & Video 360 and Magnite.', 'Netflix will begin testing its ad tech platform in Canada later this year and plans to launch it in the U.S. by the end of the second quarter next year.', ""The company aims to set the platform live everywhere by the end of 2025.The announcements came on Wednesday alongside Netflix's Upfront presentation, designed to woo advertisers."", 'The streaming giant joined its media peers for the second time in making an annual pitch to lock in advertising for its platform.', 'Earlier on Wednesday the company said it reached a deal to stream two National Football League games on Christmas Day this year, and at least one matchup on the same day in both 2025 and 2026.Netflix has the option to host one or two games in future years, with 2024 serving as a test, co-CEO Ted Sarandos told CNBC on Wednesday.', ""It marks Netflix's first real foray into live sports after years of resistance."", 'Sports, particularly the NFL, has proven to be the glue that keeps traditional TV intact — and has also proven to be a boost to streaming services.', 'Terms of the NFL deal were not disclosed, but people familiar with the matter said Netflix will pay in the ballpark of $75 million per game.', 'Spokespeople for the NFL and Netflix declined to comment.', 'The streamer will hire its own announcers for the games and partner with existing production companies.', ""Sarandos told CNBChe felt the NFL was the right fit because it matched the streamer's event strategy, allowing Netflix to effectively own the day."", 'Netflix first introduced its ad-supported subscription plan in November 2022 as part of a wider effort to drive revenueamid slowing subscriber growth.', ""That strategy included last year'spassword-sharing crackdown."", 'Since then Netflix has been moving at breakneck speed to grow its ad-supported customer base, after admittedly being slow to join the pack.', 'As part of that effort, Netflix got rid of its cheapest commercial-free plan in the U.S. and U.K.The company said Wednesday that 40% of all signups in countries that have the ad tier available are for that cheaper plan.', 'Netflix now has 270 million total subscribers.', ""For comparison, Disney's flagship service Disney+ has 117.6 million global subscribers, while Warner Bros. Discovery's streaming unit, led by Max, has 99.6 million."", 'Those two companies recently announced they would offer a streaming bundle in order to prevent subscribers from dropping subscriptions and help them to make their streaming businesses profitable.', 'Meanwhile, fledgling competitors are adding quarterly subscribers, but still trail.', ""Comcast's Peacock had 34 million customers as of the most recent quarter, while Paramount Global's Paramount+ had 71 million."", ""Netflix's monthly active ad-tier user figures come just a month after Netflix told investors it would no longer be providing quarterly subscriber number updates."", ""The company said at the time that it was generating substantial profit and free cash flow and that its membership numbers were not the only factor in the company's growth."", 'It said the metric lost significance after it started to offer multiple price points for memberships.', 'Meanwhile, linear TV audiences continue to shrink and traditional media companies seek to gain a foothold in the streaming realm.', 'Legacy media companies have suffered in recent quarters as the advertising market collapsed due to fears of a recession and surging interest rates.', 'Companies typically pullback on advertising spending during times of economic uncertainty.', 'But with a long runway ahead of it in the streaming business, Netflix has established itself as the leader in the segment as many other companies struggle to make their streaming platforms profitable.', 'Disney executives recently referred to Netflix as the ""gold standard"" of streaming, and also noted that there\'s been additional supply in the ad market due to a competitor that recently entered the game, likely referencing Netflix.', 'Media companies recently reported quarterly earnings, which showed the advertising market for traditional TV is still soft, albeit improving.', 'Digital and streaming advertising, however, has been on the rebound.', 'Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.']",0.183909881741724,The company said at the time that it was generating substantial profit and free cash flow and that its membership numbers were not the only factor in the company's growth.,Legacy media companies have suffered in recent quarters as the advertising market collapsed due to fears of a recession and surging interest rates.,0.5293343976924294,"Sports, particularly the NFL, has proven to be the glue that keeps traditional TV intact — and has also proven to be a boost to streaming services.",Legacy media companies have suffered in recent quarters as the advertising market collapsed due to fears of a recession and surging interest rates.,2024-05-20 China property crisis: Government takes action to tackle slump,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c51nyglznm6o,2024-05-17T07:41:33.670Z,"Chinese authorities have unveiled their most significant steps yet to address the crisis that has been dragging on the country's property sector in recent years. The new measures include cutting the amount home buyers need for a deposit and encouraging local authorities to purchase unsold properties. Problems in China's property market are having a major impact on the world's second largest economy as the industry had been a key driver of growth until recently. The People's Bank of China (PBOC) said it would set up a 300bn yuan ($41.5bn; £32.8bn) facility to support affordable housing. The money would be aimed to support local state-owned enterprises to buy unsold homes, said Tao Ling, a deputy governor at the central bank at a news briefing. Earlier, Vice Premier He Lifeng told officials that local governments can buy properties at ""reasonable prices"" and sell them as affordable housing, according to state-run Xinhua News Agency. Mr He did not offer details of the number of properties that could be purchased or over what timescale the initiative would run. The country's central bank also effectively scrapped the minimum mortgage rate and cut the minimum down payment for first-home buyers from 20% to 15%. The minimum deposit for second homes was lowered to 25% from 30%. Figures released earlier on Friday showed new home prices had fallen for a tenth month in a row in April. The 0.6% month-on-month decline was the sharpest drop since November 2014. Separately on Friday, struggling Chinese developer Country Garden had a hearing in a Hong Kong court over its potential liquidation adjourned to 11 June. China's property developers have been facing a major financial squeeze since 2021, when authorities introduced measures to curb the amount big real estate companies could borrow. Since then several large property developers have defaulted on their debts. In January, Evergrande - which is the world's most indebted property developer - was ordered to be liquidated by a court in Hong Kong. ",BBC,17/05/2024,"[""Chinese authorities have unveiled their most significant steps yet to address the crisis that has been dragging on the country's property sector in recent years."", 'The new measures include cutting the amount home buyers need for a deposit and encouraging local authorities to purchase unsold properties.', ""Problems in China's property market are having a major impact on the world's second largest economy as the industry had been a key driver of growth until recently."", ""The People's Bank of China (PBOC) said it would set up a 300bn yuan ($41.5bn; £32.8bn) facility to support affordable housing."", 'The money would be aimed to support local state-owned enterprises to buy unsold homes, said Tao Ling, a deputy governor at the central bank at a news briefing.', 'Earlier, Vice Premier He Lifeng told officials that local governments can buy properties at ""reasonable prices"" and sell them as affordable housing, according to state-run Xinhua News Agency.', 'Mr He did not offer details of the number of properties that could be purchased or over what timescale the initiative would run.', ""The country's central bank also effectively scrapped the minimum mortgage rate and cut the minimum down payment for first-home buyers from 20% to 15%."", 'The minimum deposit for second homes was lowered to 25% from 30%.', 'Figures released earlier on Friday showed new home prices had fallen for a tenth month in a row in April.', 'The 0.6% month-on-month decline was the sharpest drop since November 2014.', 'Separately on Friday, struggling Chinese developer Country Garden had a hearing in a Hong Kong court over its potential liquidation adjourned to 11 June.', ""China's property developers have been facing a major financial squeeze since 2021, when authorities introduced measures to curb the amount big real estate companies could borrow."", 'Since then several large property developers have defaulted on their debts.', ""In January, Evergrande - which is the world's most indebted property developer - was ordered to be liquidated by a court in Hong Kong.""]",-0.0097321247992762,The new measures include cutting the amount home buyers need for a deposit and encouraging local authorities to purchase unsold properties.,Chinese authorities have unveiled their most significant steps yet to address the crisis that has been dragging on the country's property sector in recent years.,-0.937471457890102,,The 0.6% month-on-month decline was the sharpest drop since November 2014.,2024-05-20 How the Ukraine war brought China and Russia closer together,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/15/business/china-russia-ties-ukraine-war-intl-hnk-dg/index.html," Updated 11:24 PM EDT, Wed May 15, 2024 ","As countries around the world ramped up sanctions on Russia in the wake of Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, it became clear that the Russian president still had a powerful friend in Xi Jinping. The Chinese leader, who declared a “no limits” partnership with Russia weeks before the full-scale invasion, set a policy of decrying sanctions and continuing to strengthen ties with Putin. On Thursday, Xi welcomed the Russian president to China for a two-day state visit — their fourth in-person meeting since Russia’s onslaught in Ukraine began. The war has driven the two leaders and their economies closer together — with trade hitting record levels last year as Russia upped its imports of key commodities from China and Chinese buyers lapped up discounted Russian fuel. The United States has said Chinese exports of products like machine tools and microelectronics are enabling Russia to bolster the defense industrial base powering its war in Ukraine, and official data show hefty increases of related goods that are consistent with those claims. China has repeatedly defended its trade with Russia as part of normal bilateral relations. It also says it maintains a neutral position on the war and plays no other role than seeking peace. Here’s how the two sides have upgraded their ties since February 2022. The European Union, the US and many of its allies and others across the world have imposed a range of sanctions targeting Russian entities and the flow of goods to and from the warring country. Those have included efforts to limit its revenue from key exports like fuel, as well as its access to technologies and goods with military applications. Despite these efforts to isolate Putin’s government and reduce its war coffers, Russia’s economy blew past expectations to grow by 3.6% in 2023, according to data from the International Monetary Fund. That followed a contraction in 2022, according to Russian state media. The sanctions have caused a sweeping shift in who Russia trades with — and China has emerged as a key economic lifeline, greatly expanding trade ties with its northern neighbor. The two countries last year racked up $240 billion in bilateral trade, hitting a target to exceed $200 billion in two-way trade by 2024 ahead of schedule — a feat lauded by both Putin and Xi. That’s driven China to rank as Russia’s top trade partner, Putin declared last year, with his presidential aide later confirming to Russian state media that the country had surpassed the EU to take that spot. As the EU slashed purchases of Russian fuel and limited exports ranging from high-tech goods to transportation equipment, China bolstered its own exports of industrial and commercial goods to the country, such as vehicles, machinery and home appliances, data and official statements show. Russia has also become China’s main oil supplier, overtaking Saudi Arabia, according to official Chinese trade data. China, however, is not alone in taking advantage of Russia’s need to find new markets for its fuel, with India also among buyers upping imports in the wake of the war. The wartime surge in trade, and growing purchases of oil, have sparked criticism in the West that China was helping to fund Russia’s war. Western governments and independent analysts also raised alarm that dual-use goods with potential military applications are part of these surging imports. White House officials in recent weeks have confronted China on what they believe is Beijing’s substantial support for Russia’s defense industrial base, including through exports like semiconductors, materials and machine tools they say are enabling Russia to ramp up production of tanks, munitions and armored vehicles. In a visit to Beijing late last month, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned Chinese leaders that the US and other countries would act if Beijing didn’t move to stem this flow. French President Emmanuel Macron and his European Commission counterpart Ursula von der Leyen also pressed Xi on such supplies during the leader’s state visit to France last week, with Von der Leyen saying after the meeting that “more effort is needed to curtail delivery of dual-use goods to Russia that find their way to the battlefield.” Beijing has previously slammed the US as making “groundless accusations” over “normal trade and economic exchanges” between China and Russia. But analysts have pointed to nascent, potential signs that China may be seeking to dial down such imports — with China’s monthly exports to Russia declining in both March and April compared with the same periods in 2023, according to official Chinese customs data. Xi and Putin’s relationship has also appeared to strengthen as both leaders consolidated power, rewriting previous term limits in recent years to extend their respective lengthy rules. The war has not changed that dynamic. Putin’s overseas travel has declined since the outbreak of the conflict, but this trip marks his second to China since the invasion and the two leaders’ fourth in-person meeting in that time. Xi has made a single known phone call to Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky during that period and met US President Joe Biden in person twice on the sidelines of international summits since Biden took office in 2021. Xi and Putin have a history of marking milestones together. This week’s visit is Putin’s symbolic first international trip since starting a fifth term in office following his victory in a tightly controlled election in March. It mirrors Xi’s state visit to Russia in March 2023, which was the Chinese leader’s first overseas trip after starting a norm-shattering third term as president.",CNN,15/05/2024,"['As countries around the world ramped up sanctions on Russia in the wake of Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, it became clear that the Russian president still had a powerful friend in Xi Jinping.', 'The Chinese leader, who declared a “no limits” partnership with Russia weeks before the full-scale invasion, set a policy of decrying sanctions and continuing to strengthen ties with Putin.', 'On Thursday, Xi welcomed the Russian president to China for a two-day state visit — their fourth in-person meeting since Russia’s onslaught in Ukraine began.', 'The war has driven the two leaders and their economies closer together — with trade hitting record levels last year as Russia upped its imports of key commodities from China and Chinese buyers lapped up discounted Russian fuel.', 'The United States has said Chinese exports of products like machine tools and microelectronics are enabling Russia to bolster the defense industrial base powering its war in Ukraine, and official data show hefty increases of related goods that are consistent with those claims.', 'China has repeatedlydefended its tradewith Russia as part of normal bilateral relations.', 'It also says it maintains a neutral position on the war and plays no other role than seeking peace.', 'Here’s how the two sides have upgraded their ties since February 2022.', 'The European Union, the US and many of its allies and others across the world have imposed a range of sanctions targeting Russian entities and the flow of goods to and from the warring country.', 'Those have included efforts to limit its revenue from key exports like fuel, as well as its access to technologies and goods with military applications.', 'Despite these efforts to isolate Putin’s government and reduce its war coffers, Russia’s economy blew past expectations to grow by 3.6% in 2023, according to data from the International Monetary Fund.', 'That followed a contraction in 2022, according to Russian state media.', 'The sanctions have caused a sweeping shift in who Russia trades with — and China has emerged as a key economic lifeline, greatly expanding trade ties with its northern neighbor.', 'The two countries last year racked up $240 billion in bilateral trade, hitting a target to exceed $200 billion in two-way trade by 2024 ahead of schedule — a feat lauded by both Putin and Xi.', 'That’s driven China to rank as Russia’s top trade partner, Putin declared last year, with his presidential aide later confirming to Russian state media that the countryhad surpassed the EU to take that spot.', 'As the EU slashed purchases of Russian fuel and limited exports ranging from high-tech goods to transportation equipment, China bolstered its own exports ofindustrial and commercial goods to the country, such as vehicles, machinery and home appliances, data and official statements show.', 'Russia has also become China’s main oil supplier, overtaking Saudi Arabia, according to official Chinese trade data.', 'China, however, is not alone in taking advantage of Russia’s need to find new markets for its fuel, with India also among buyers upping imports in the wake of the war.', 'The wartime surge in trade, and growing purchases of oil, have sparked criticism in the West that China was helping to fund Russia’s war.', 'Western governments and independent analysts also raised alarm that dual-use goods with potential military applications are part of these surging imports.', 'White House officials in recent weeks have confronted China on what they believe is Beijing’s substantial support for Russia’s defense industrial base, including through exports like semiconductors, materials and machine tools they say are enabling Russia to ramp up production of tanks, munitions and armored vehicles.', 'In a visit to Beijing late last month, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned Chinese leaders that the US and other countries would act if Beijing didn’t move to stem this flow.', 'French President Emmanuel Macron and his European Commission counterpart Ursula von der Leyen also pressed Xi on such supplies during the leader’s state visit to France last week, with Von der Leyen saying after the meeting that “more effort is needed to curtail delivery of dual-use goods to Russia that find their way to the battlefield.”', 'Beijing has previously slammed the US as making “groundless accusations” over “normal trade and economic exchanges” between China and Russia.', 'But analysts have pointed to nascent, potential signs that China may be seeking to dial down such imports — with China’s monthly exports to Russia declining in both March and April compared with the same periods in 2023, according to official Chinese customs data.', 'Xi and Putin’s relationship has also appeared to strengthen as both leaders consolidated power,rewritingprevious term limits in recent years to extend theirrespective lengthy rules.', 'The war has not changed that dynamic.', 'Putin’s overseas travel has declined since the outbreak of the conflict, but this trip marks his second to China since the invasion and the two leaders’ fourth in-person meeting in that time.', 'Xi has made a single known phone call to Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky during that period and met US President Joe Biden in person twice on the sidelines of international summits since Biden took office in 2021.', 'Xi and Putin have a history of marking milestones together.', 'This week’s visit is Putin’s symbolic first international trip since starting a fifth term in office following his victory in a tightly controlled election in March.', 'It mirrors Xi’s state visit to Russia in March 2023, which was the Chinese leader’s first overseas trip after starting a norm-shattering third term as president.']",-0.0655592523259092,"As countries around the world ramped up sanctions on Russia in the wake of Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, it became clear that the Russian president still had a powerful friend in Xi Jinping.",The war has not changed that dynamic.,0.2841697226871144,"Xi and Putin’s relationship has also appeared to strengthen as both leaders consolidated power,rewritingprevious term limits in recent years to extend theirrespective lengthy rules.","But analysts have pointed to nascent, potential signs that China may be seeking to dial down such imports — with China’s monthly exports to Russia declining in both March and April compared with the same periods in 2023, according to official Chinese customs data.",2024-05-20 "NBC cut ties with Ronna McDaniel after extraordinary pressure, but its problems aren’t over",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/27/media/nbc-ronna-mcdaniel-problems-are-not-over/index.html," Updated 8:16 AM EDT, Wed March 27, 2024 ","Only 80 hours elapsed between NBC News announcing Ronna McDaniel as a paid contributor and the network ousting her from that very role. But for the leadership at NBC Universal News Group, those were 80 painful hours. On Tuesday evening, following another full day in which the media rumor mill churned at warp speed, NBCU News Group boss Cesar Conde sent staff a memo, notifying his troops that he had reversed his decision to welcome the former Republican National Committee chair to “the team.” “After listening to the legitimate concerns of many of you, I have decided that Ronna McDaniel will not be an NBC News contributor,” Conde said, adding that he wanted to “personally apologize to our team members who felt we let them down.” Conde had no real choice. The embattled NBCU boss, who I’m told dealt with the crisis from an unknown location outside of 30 Rock, was facing an unprecedented rebellion from his most high-profile stars, who one by one went on the air and excoriated leadership’s decision to hire McDaniel. The only aspect of Conde’s note that was surprising was the fact that it came 48 hours late, allowing what started off as a crisis to fester and balloon into one of the worst corporate public relations calamities in recent memory. “What a sh*t show!” a media executive exclaimed to me Tuesday shortly after Conde relieved McDaniel of her NBC News credentials. In his note, Conde said he took “full responsibility” for McDaniel’s hire. But, he also did point the finger, telling staffers that hiring her was “a collective recommendation by some members of our leadership team.” Indeed, multiple people familiar with the matter have told me that the infighting among NBC executives over who was at fault for the disaster has reached a fever pitch, with various factions of the NBCU News Group assigning blame to others. Regardless of who is to blame, the entire affair made clear who is actually in control of the company — and it’s not Conde & Co. Despite the NBCU C-suite digging their heels in the sand as they resisted dumping McDaniel for days, they were ultimately forced to succumb to pressure from their talent. As a second media executive commented to me, it is now “very clear who is in charge” after the “weak leadership was put on full display.” “Has Cesar lost the room?” wondered a third media executive. While the Peacock family argues over who was really at fault, the company is facing a fresh public relations mess. Led by Donald Trump, right-wing personalities are already assailing the network as being overrun with intolerant woke leftists. “These Radical Left Lunatics are CRAZY and the top people at NBC ARE WEAK,” Trump raged on his Truth Social platform. Ari Fleischer, who served as press secretary under President George W. Bush, wrote on X: “What NBC is saying is if you’re for Trump, you don’t belong. Good. Let NBC be for Democrats only.” Of course, that narrative is intellectually dishonest. The objection to McDaniel from both within and outside of NBCU was not that she is a Republican. It wasn’t even that she was a Trump-supporting Republican. No, the objection stemmed from the fact that McDaniel was an active participant in the plot to subvert the 2020 vote. And, in addition to that disgraceful history, she had a lengthy track record smearing NBC News and MSNBC. Nevertheless, NBCU will now have to contend with such dishonest attacks being leveled by the right, which will follow them in the days, months, and even years to come. As unfair as it may be, they will certainly damage the network’s brand in Republican circles — a place it had gone through great pains to appeal to. NBCU will also have to grapple with McDaniel, who spent the last 24 hours or so interviewing lawyers as she gears up for a possible legal fight with the network, according to a person familiar with the matter. The rift between McDaniel and NBCU had grown to such an extent by Tuesday that she was not informed by network brass that she had been dismissed, I’m told. Instead, McDaniel learned of her ouster in press reports. While NBCU is being beaten up on the right, the company’s leadership was quickly praised by its journalists and top stars. Shortly after Conde sent out his memo, Rachel Maddow appeared on Joy Reid’s show, where the two lauded Conde for reversing course. “I think it is a show of strength and a show of respect for the people who work at this company and make us who we are,” Maddow said. “That leadership was willing to change on this, I’m grateful to them.”",CNN,27/03/2024,"['Only 80 hours elapsed between NBC News announcing Ronna McDaniel as a paid contributor and the network ousting her from that very role.', 'But for the leadership at NBC Universal News Group, those were 80painful hours.', 'On Tuesday evening, following another full day in which the media rumor mill churned at warp speed, NBCU News Group boss Cesar Conde sent staff a memo, notifying his troops that he had reversed his decision to welcome the former Republican National Committee chair to “the team.”', '“After listening to the legitimate concerns of many of you, I have decided that Ronna McDaniel will not be an NBC News contributor,” Conde said, adding that he wanted to “personally apologize to our team members who felt we let them down.”', 'Conde had no real choice.', 'The embattled NBCU boss, who I’m told dealt with the crisis from an unknown location outside of 30 Rock, was facing an unprecedented rebellion from his most high-profile stars, who one by one went on the air and excoriated leadership’s decision to hire McDaniel.', 'The only aspect of Conde’s note that was surprising was the fact that it came 48 hours late, allowing what started off as a crisis to fester and balloon into one of the worst corporate public relations calamities in recent memory.', '“What a sh*t show!”', 'a media executive exclaimed to me Tuesday shortly after Conde relieved McDaniel of her NBC News credentials.', 'In his note, Conde said he took “full responsibility” for McDaniel’s hire.', 'But, he also did point the finger, telling staffers that hiring her was “a collective recommendation by some members of our leadership team.”', 'Indeed, multiple people familiar with the matter have told me that the infighting among NBC executives over who was at fault for the disaster has reached a fever pitch, with various factions of the NBCU News Group assigning blame to others.', 'Regardless of who is to blame, the entire affair made clear who is actually in control of the company — and it’s not Conde & Co. Despite the NBCU C-suite digging their heels in the sand as they resisted dumping McDaniel for days, they were ultimately forced to succumb to pressure from their talent.', 'As a second media executive commented to me, it is now “very clear who is in charge” after the “weak leadership was put on full display.”', '“Has Cesar lost the room?”', 'wondered a third media executive.', 'While the Peacock family argues over who was really at fault, the company is facing a fresh public relations mess.', 'Led by Donald Trump, right-wing personalities are already assailing the network as being overrun with intolerant woke leftists.', '“These Radical Left Lunatics are CRAZY and the top people at NBC ARE WEAK,” Trump raged on his Truth Social platform.', 'Ari Fleischer, who served as press secretary under President George W. Bush, wrote on X: “What NBC is saying is if you’re for Trump, you don’t belong.', 'Good.', 'Let NBC be for Democrats only.”', 'Of course, that narrative is intellectually dishonest.', 'The objection to McDaniel from both within and outside of NBCU was not that she is a Republican.', 'It wasn’t even that she was a Trump-supporting Republican.', 'No, the objection stemmed from the fact that McDaniel was an active participant in the plot to subvert the 2020 vote.', 'And, in addition to that disgraceful history, she had a lengthy track record smearing NBC News and MSNBC.', 'Nevertheless, NBCU will now have to contend with such dishonest attacks being leveled by the right, which will follow them in the days, months, and even years to come.', 'As unfair as it may be, they will certainly damage the network’s brand in Republican circles — a place it had gone through great pains to appeal to.', 'NBCU will also have to grapple with McDaniel, who spent the last 24 hours or so interviewing lawyers as she gears up for a possible legal fight with the network, according to a person familiar with the matter.', 'The rift between McDaniel and NBCU had grown to such an extent by Tuesday that she was not informed by network brass that she had been dismissed, I’m told.', 'Instead, McDaniel learned of her ouster in press reports.', 'While NBCU is being beaten up on the right, the company’s leadership was quickly praised by its journalists and top stars.', 'Shortly after Conde sent out his memo, Rachel Maddow appeared on Joy Reid’s show, where the two lauded Conde for reversing course.', '“I think it is a show of strength and a show of respect for the people who work at this company and make us who we are,” Maddow said. “', 'That leadership was willing to change on this, I’m grateful to them.”']",-0.0743400881523301,"“I think it is a show of strength and a show of respect for the people who work at this company and make us who we are,” Maddow said. “","“These Radical Left Lunatics are CRAZY and the top people at NBC ARE WEAK,” Trump raged on his Truth Social platform.",-0.3914040706374428,"While NBCU is being beaten up on the right, the company’s leadership was quickly praised by its journalists and top stars.","As unfair as it may be, they will certainly damage the network’s brand in Republican circles — a place it had gone through great pains to appeal to.",2024-05-20 "Dow closes above 40,000 for first time ever",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/markets/dow-closes-above-40-000/index.html," Updated 4:30 PM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above the 40,000 mark Friday for the first time in its 139-year history. The blue-chip index initially crossed the key threshold early Thursday but ended that day lower. Wall Street has been boosted in recent days by renewed hopes of rate cuts from the Federal Reserve that would loosen monetary conditions for consumers and businesses. A report this week from the Bureau of Labor Statistics indicated that inflation has started to ease, potentially paving the way for the central bank to start implementing the rate cut that investors have been expecting since the start of the year. “40,000 is a great milestone, but end of the day there isn’t much difference between 39,999 and 40k,” said Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group, in a note Friday. “Still, this is a great reminder of how far we’ve come. Think about how many people were talking about recessions and bear markets all of last year. Now we are once again back to new highs.” “Investors who were patient and ignored all the scary headlines were once again rewarded, just as they have been throughout history,” he wrote. All major indexes closed the week higher, but markets were mixed on Friday. The Dow rose 134 points, or 0.3%, to close at a record high of 40,003.59. This is the Dow’s fifth consecutive winning week. The S&P 500 gained 0.1% and the Nasdaq Composite closed 0.1% lower. Crossing the 40,000 level doesn’t hold much practical value for investors, but it does catch the attention of the public and, some argue, it could help propel that optimistic sentiment beyond Wall Street. “The Dow 40,000 milestone also shows how resilient the US economy has been, at a time where there was a plethora of calls for a recession,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Financial, in a recent note to CNN. “The overarching importance of crossing these big round numbers is that it brings Wall Street news to Main Street, at least for a day. It also serves as an affirmation that corporate earnings are growing, and that investor confidence remains robust,” he said. To many Americans, “the Dow” simply means the stock market. The index’s small cache of stocks — ranging from Microsoft to McDonald’s to Chevron — represents some of the largest companies in the nation and are widely held among retail and institutional investors alike. Here are some important stops along the Dow’s road to 40,000: Dow is formed: The first daily close, on May 26, 1896, was 40.94. The Dow did not get off to a good start, plunging 30% to an all-time low of 28.48 by August that year. Dow 100: The Dow first closed in triple digits in January 1906. That marked an impressive rally for the average, which had hit an all-time low when Teddy Roosevelt was president. The Federal Reserve would not be created for seven more years. Crash of 1929: The Dow fell 38 points on Oct. 28 and 31 more points the next day. That might not sound bad today, but it represented back-to-back declines of 13% and 12% of the Dow’s value. They are still two of the worst one-day percentage declines in the index’s history. Dow 1,000: Nov. 14, 1972. Richard Nixon had just won reelection by taking 49 states. The Dow’s components, which had been unchanged for 13 years, included Woolworth, Eastman Kodak and International Nickel. Crash of 1987: On Oct. 19, the Dow plunged 508 points, a 23% drop that is still the largest one-day percentage decline in history. A week later it took an 8% plunge. But the damage was short-lived: Within a year, the Dow was back to pre-crash levels. Dow 10,000: March 29, 1999. The “irrational exuberance” of the tech bubble was in full swing as the Dow gained 1,000 points in less than a year to hit this benchmark. It gained 1,000 more points in just the next month. A year later, the dot-com stock bubble burst, sending the Dow down nearly 30% by September 2001. Meltdown of 2008-2009: The financial crisis caused the Dow to lose about half its value in less than a year, bottoming out to close at 6,547 on March 9, 2009. The worst day was Sept. 29, 2008, when the Dow lost what was then a record 778 points after Congress rejected a $700 billion bank bailout. The bailout was later approved. Dow 15,000: May 7, 2013. As the economy continued to recover from the Great Recession, the Dow had one of the current bull market’s strongest periods. It crossed the 15,000 mark and finished the year up 26.5%, marking the best full-year performance of the current bull market. The Dow nearly matched that in 2017, rising 25%. Dow 20,000: January 25, 2017. The stock market had enjoyed a nice run starting on the day after the 2016 election, with the Dow gaining nearly 10% as investors looked forward to lower taxes and less regulation under the Trump administration. Dow 25,000: Jan. 4, 2018. The passage of the Trump tax cuts, especially the lowering of the corporate tax rate in December 2017, helped feed the quick move between 20,000 and 25,000. Dow 30,000: Nov. 24, 2020: Covid sent the stock market plunging in the spring of 2020. But new hopes of a vaccine and the results of the presidential election ended an era of uncertainty on Wall Street, sending the stock market rolling once again.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above the 40,000 mark Friday for the first time in its 139-year history.', 'The blue-chip index initially crossed the key threshold early Thursday but ended that day lower.', 'Wall Street has been boosted in recent days by renewed hopes of rate cuts from the Federal Reserve that would loosen monetary conditions for consumers and businesses.', 'A report this week from the Bureau of Labor Statistics indicated that inflation has started to ease, potentially paving the way for the central bank to start implementing the rate cut that investors have been expecting since the start of the year.', '“40,000is a great milestone, but end of the day there isn’t much difference between 39,999 and 40k,” said Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group, in a note Friday. “', 'Still, this is a great reminder of how far we’ve come.', 'Think about how many people were talking about recessions and bear markets all of last year.', 'Now we are once again back to new highs.”', '“Investors who were patient and ignored all the scary headlines were once again rewarded, just as they have been throughout history,” he wrote.', 'All major indexes closed the week higher, but markets were mixed on Friday.', 'The Dow rose 134 points, or 0.3%, to close at a record high of 40,003.59.', 'This is the Dow’s fifth consecutive winning week.', 'The S&P 500 gained 0.1% and the Nasdaq Composite closed 0.1% lower.', 'Crossing the 40,000 leveldoesn’t hold much practical value for investors,but it does catch the attention of the public and, some argue, it could help propel that optimistic sentiment beyond Wall Street.', '“The Dow 40,000 milestone also shows how resilient the US economy has been, at a time where there was a plethora of calls for a recession,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Financial, in a recent note to CNN.', '“The overarching importance of crossing these big round numbers is that it brings Wall Street news to Main Street, at least for a day.', 'It also serves as an affirmation that corporate earnings are growing, and that investor confidence remains robust,” he said.', 'To many Americans, “the Dow” simply means the stock market.', 'The index’s small cache of stocks — ranging from Microsoft to McDonald’s to Chevron — represents some of the largest companies in the nation and are widely held among retail and institutional investors alike.', 'Here are some important stops along the Dow’s road to 40,000: Dow is formed:The first daily close, on May 26, 1896, was 40.94.', 'The Dow did not get off to a good start, plunging 30% to an all-time low of 28.48 by August that year.', 'Dow 100:The Dow first closed in triple digits in January 1906.', 'That marked an impressive rally for the average, which had hit an all-time low when Teddy Roosevelt was president.', 'The Federal Reserve would not be created for seven more years.', 'Crash of 1929:The Dow fell 38 points on Oct. 28 and 31 more points the next day.', 'That might not sound bad today, but it represented back-to-back declines of 13% and 12% of the Dow’s value.', 'They are still two of the worst one-day percentage declines in the index’s history.', 'Dow 1,000:Nov. 14, 1972.', 'Richard Nixon had just won reelection by taking 49 states.', 'The Dow’s components, which had been unchanged for 13 years, included Woolworth, Eastman Kodak and International Nickel.', 'Crash of 1987:On Oct. 19, the Dow plunged 508 points, a 23% drop that is still the largest one-day percentage decline in history.', 'A week later it took an 8% plunge.', 'But the damage was short-lived: Within a year, the Dow was back to pre-crash levels.', 'Dow 10,000:March 29, 1999.', 'The “irrational exuberance” of the tech bubble was in full swing as the Dow gained 1,000 points in less than a year to hit this benchmark.', 'It gained 1,000 more points in just the next month.', 'A year later, the dot-com stock bubble burst, sending the Dow down nearly 30% by September 2001.', 'Meltdown of 2008-2009:The financial crisis caused the Dow to lose about half its value in less than a year, bottoming out to close at 6,547 on March 9, 2009.', 'The worst day was Sept. 29, 2008, when the Dow lost what was then a record 778 points after Congress rejected a $700 billion bank bailout.', 'The bailout was later approved.', 'Dow 15,000:May 7, 2013.', 'As the economy continued to recover from the Great Recession, the Dow had one of the current bull market’s strongest periods.', 'It crossed the 15,000 mark and finished the year up 26.5%, marking the best full-year performance of the current bull market.', 'The Dow nearly matched that in 2017, rising 25%.', 'Dow 20,000:January 25, 2017.', 'The stock market had enjoyed a nice run starting on the day after the 2016 election, with the Dow gaining nearly 10% as investors looked forward to lower taxes and less regulation under the Trump administration.', 'Dow 25,000:Jan. 4, 2018.', 'The passage of the Trump tax cuts, especially the lowering of the corporate tax rate in December 2017, helped feed the quick move between 20,000 and 25,000.', 'Dow 30,000:Nov. 24, 2020: Covid sent the stock market plunging in the spring of 2020.', 'But new hopes of a vaccine and the results of the presidential election ended an era of uncertainty on Wall Street, sending the stock market rolling once again.']",0.0555875297815642,"The stock market had enjoyed a nice run starting on the day after the 2016 election, with the Dow gaining nearly 10% as investors looked forward to lower taxes and less regulation under the Trump administration.","The worst day was Sept. 29, 2008, when the Dow lost what was then a record 778 points after Congress rejected a $700 billion bank bailout.",0.2731890783590429,"The stock market had enjoyed a nice run starting on the day after the 2016 election, with the Dow gaining nearly 10% as investors looked forward to lower taxes and less regulation under the Trump administration.","The Dow did not get off to a good start, plunging 30% to an all-time low of 28.48 by August that year.",2024-05-20 How bad bets on meme stocks led to a $1 billion wipeout,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/15/investing/gamestop-short-sellers-nightcap/index.html," Updated 2:20 PM EDT, Wed May 15, 2024 ","The only bet riskier than buying meme stocks like GameStop may be cheering for their decline. That’s the lesson Wall Street’s short-sellers are learning the hard way this week. See here: For the first four months of the year, GameStop short-sellers — investors who bet on a stock’s decline — were sitting on $392 million in gains, up nearly 50%. But with this week’s surge, those gains have vanished and left shorts with more than $1.2 billion in paper losses, according to research from S3 Partners. Nearly $1 billion of that was wiped out Monday alone. To understand the meme stock phenomenon, it helps to understand a bit of the tribalism underpinning it. When meme stocks first emerged in 2021, the day traders running up the price of GameStop weren’t a bunch of anti-establishment marauders attacking Wall Street generally — they were going for the short-sellers, regarded by many, from retail investors to CEOs like Elon Musk, to be the most reviled traders in finance. After all, no one likes the guy who gets rich off of others’ failings. (Short-sellers argue, however, that they play an important role in preventing market bubbles.) Disgust for short-sellers fueled GameStop’s 2,000% surge that ultimately squeezed firms like Citron Research to retire from the short-selling game and, a year later, forced the hedge fund Melvin Capital to fold entirely. The Reddit community that originated the frenzy, WallStreetBets, preached an us-vs.-them investing style, often using profane language and memes to paint the short-sellers as the enemy. If you were one of the Apes (as the day traders called themselves), inflicting financial pain on the shorts was just as important, if not more important, than lining your own pockets. Although the meme fever is rising this week — set off by a single, wordless social media post by the GameStop stock guru RoaringKitty — we’re unlikely to see a repeat of the frenzy that gripped Wall Street three years ago. At that time, GameStop’s “short interest,” aka the number of shares sold short relative to its total public float, was a staggering 140%, meaning some shares had been shorted more than once. Today, short interest is just 24% — firmly in negative sentiment territory, but nowhere near the absurd levels of January 2021. Today’s GameStop shorts aren’t likely to hang on and repeat the mistakes of their Melvin Capital brethren. Then again, shorts and their meme-pushing long-positioned enemies share a reputation for relentlessness. Looking at the fundamentals of GameStop — a mall-based retailer that’s burning through cash and has already slashed expenses to stay in business — it’s easy to understand why folks are wagering that it’s on the decline. “Buy to cover” trades will force a lot of shorts out of their positions and push GameStop’s stock price higher than the day traders could on their own, wrote Ihor Dusaniwsky, managing director of predictive analytics at S3 Partners, in a note Tuesday. “But there will also be new short sellers entering the ring, with GME’s stock price over $30 being an attractive entry point.”",CNN,15/05/2024,"['The only bet riskier than buying meme stocks like GameStop may be cheering for their decline.', 'That’s the lesson Wall Street’s short-sellers are learning the hard way this week.', 'See here: For the first four months of the year, GameStop short-sellers — investors who bet on a stock’s decline — were sitting on $392 million in gains, up nearly 50%.', 'But with this week’s surge, those gains have vanished and left shorts with more than $1.2 billion in paper losses, according to research from S3 Partners.', 'Nearly $1 billion of that was wiped out Monday alone.', 'To understand the meme stock phenomenon, it helps to understand a bit of the tribalism underpinning it.', 'When meme stocks first emerged in 2021, the day traders running up the price of GameStop weren’t a bunch of anti-establishment marauders attacking Wall Street generally — they were going for the short-sellers, regarded by many, from retail investors to CEOs like Elon Musk, to be the most reviled traders in finance.', 'After all, no one likes the guy who gets rich off of others’ failings. (', 'Short-sellers argue, however, that they play an important role in preventing market bubbles.)', 'Disgust for short-sellers fueled GameStop’s 2,000% surge that ultimately squeezed firms like Citron Research to retire from the short-selling game and, a year later, forced the hedge fund Melvin Capital to fold entirely.', 'The Reddit community that originated the frenzy, WallStreetBets, preached an us-vs.-them investing style, often using profane language and memes to paint the short-sellers as the enemy.', 'If you were one of the Apes (as the day traders called themselves), inflicting financial pain on the shorts was just as important, if not more important, than lining your own pockets.', 'Although the meme fever is rising this week — set off by a single, wordless social media post by the GameStop stock guru RoaringKitty — we’re unlikely to see a repeat of the frenzy that gripped Wall Street three years ago.', 'At that time, GameStop’s “short interest,” aka the number of shares sold short relative to its total public float, was a staggering 140%, meaning some shares had been shorted more than once.', 'Today, short interest is just 24% — firmly in negative sentiment territory, but nowhere near the absurd levels of January 2021.', 'Today’s GameStop shorts aren’t likely to hang on and repeat the mistakes of their Melvin Capital brethren.', 'Then again, shorts and their meme-pushing long-positioned enemies share a reputation for relentlessness.', 'Looking at the fundamentals of GameStop — a mall-based retailer that’s burning through cash and has already slashed expenses to stay in business — it’s easy to understand why folks are wagering that it’s on the decline.', '“Buy to cover” trades will force a lot of shorts out of their positions and push GameStop’s stock price higher than the day traders could on their own, wrote Ihor Dusaniwsky, managing director of predictive analytics at S3 Partners, in a note Tuesday.', '“But there will also be new short sellers entering the ring, with GME’s stock price over $30 being an attractive entry point.”']",-0.0245157765544018,"At that time, GameStop’s “short interest,” aka the number of shares sold short relative to its total public float, was a staggering 140%, meaning some shares had been shorted more than once.","The Reddit community that originated the frenzy, WallStreetBets, preached an us-vs.-them investing style, often using profane language and memes to paint the short-sellers as the enemy.",-0.4610407087537977,"See here: For the first four months of the year, GameStop short-sellers — investors who bet on a stock’s decline — were sitting on $392 million in gains, up nearly 50%.","But with this week’s surge, those gains have vanished and left shorts with more than $1.2 billion in paper losses, according to research from S3 Partners.",2024-05-20 The Chevrolet Corvette is officially going electric,https://edition.cnn.com/2022/04/25/business/electric-hybrid-corvette/index.html," Updated 12:22 PM EDT, Mon April 25, 2022 ","General Motors will produce a fully electric Chevrolet Corvette, GM President Mark Reuss announced in a LinkedIn post Monday morning. Reuss didn’t say when the electric Corvette would come, but he hinted that a hybrid model could come relatively soon. “We will offer an electrified Corvette as early as next year,” he wrote. An accompanying video the company posted to Twitter showed what appeared to be a hybrid Corvette, and in another first, showed the front wheels spinning and throwing snow as if being powered. All Corvettes produced by the company previously have been rear-wheel-drive only. While Reuss’s post implies a hybrid Corvette will be based on the current generation of the car, it’s not clear if the all-electric version will be a variation of this car or a completely different future model. “Electrified” is an auto industry term encompassing everything from hybrid to fully electric vehicles, and anything with an electric motor can count as “electrified.” It has long been rumored that the current generation of the Corvette, the first with its gasoline engine mounted behind the seats instead of in the front, could be built with a hybrid system. Reuss has also previously hinted there would be electrified variants of the car. Various companies are working on electric sports cars. Most all-electric vehicles in production so far have been four-door sedans and SUVs, as the need for batteries lends itself to larger and heavier vehicles. Tesla’s first car, the Lotus Elise-based Tesla Roadster, was an electric sports car, but the second-generation of Tesla Roadster, originally unveiled as a prototype in 2017, has yet to go into production. Some manufacturers, such as Lamborghini, have said that current battery technology doesn’t allow for a optimum sports car performance from a purely electric vehicle. Lamborghini has been working on plug-in hybrid sports cars, though. To date, the Corvette is only available in the base Stingray version with 6.2-liter V8 engine producing up to 495 horsepower. A 670 horsepower Corvette Z06 with a 5.5-liter V8 was unveiled last fall. The previous generation of the Corvette included included a 755-horsepower ZR1 version. Nothing like that has yet been announced for the current model but GM engineers have said a major reason for putting the engine in the back was to allow for better performance at extremely high horsepower levels. Besides saving gas, hybrid systems can also be used in high-performance cars to add additional power and to provide for quicker acceleration since electric motors can provide power to the wheels more quickly than gas engines. Ferrari’s most powerful sports cars are hybrids, for instance. GM has said it plans to produce only zero-emission vehicles, meaning fully electric or powered by hydrogen fuel cells, by 2035.",CNN,25/04/2022,"['General Motors will produce a fully electric Chevrolet Corvette, GM President Mark Reuss announced in a LinkedIn post Monday morning.', 'Reuss didn’t say when the electric Corvette would come, but he hinted that a hybrid model could come relatively soon. “', 'We will offer an electrified Corvette as early as next year,” he wrote.', 'An accompanying video the company posted to Twitter showed what appeared to be a hybrid Corvette, and in another first, showed the front wheels spinning and throwing snow as if being powered.', 'All Corvettes produced by the company previously have been rear-wheel-drive only.', 'While Reuss’s post implies a hybrid Corvette will be based on the current generation of the car, it’s not clear if the all-electric version will be a variation of this car or a completely different future model.', '“Electrified” is an auto industry term encompassing everything from hybrid to fully electric vehicles, and anything with an electric motor can count as “electrified.”', 'It has long been rumored that the current generation of the Corvette, the first with its gasoline engine mounted behind the seats instead of in the front, could be built with a hybrid system.', 'Reuss has also previously hinted there would be electrified variants of the car.', 'Various companies are working on electric sports cars.', 'Most all-electric vehicles in production so far have been four-door sedans and SUVs, as the need for batteries lends itself to larger and heavier vehicles.', 'Tesla’s first car, the Lotus Elise-based Tesla Roadster, was an electric sports car, but the second-generation of Tesla Roadster, originally unveiled as a prototype in 2017, has yet to go into production.', 'Some manufacturers, such as Lamborghini, have said that current battery technology doesn’t allow for a optimum sports car performance from a purely electric vehicle.', 'Lamborghini has been working on plug-in hybrid sports cars, though.', 'To date, the Corvette is only available in the base Stingray version with 6.2-liter V8 engine producing up to 495 horsepower.', 'A 670 horsepower Corvette Z06 with a 5.5-liter V8 was unveiled last fall.', 'The previous generation of the Corvette included included a 755-horsepower ZR1 version.', 'Nothing like that has yet been announced for the current model but GM engineers have said a major reason for putting the engine in the back was to allow for better performance at extremely high horsepower levels.', 'Besides saving gas, hybrid systems can also be used in high-performance cars to add additional power and to provide for quicker acceleration since electric motors can provide power to the wheels more quickly than gas engines.', 'Ferrari’s most powerful sports cars are hybrids, for instance.', 'GM has said it plans to produce only zero-emission vehicles, meaning fully electric or powered by hydrogen fuel cells, by 2035.']",0.0521320736918344,Nothing like that has yet been announced for the current model but GM engineers have said a major reason for putting the engine in the back was to allow for better performance at extremely high horsepower levels.,"While Reuss’s post implies a hybrid Corvette will be based on the current generation of the car, it’s not clear if the all-electric version will be a variation of this car or a completely different future model.",0.3646016319592793,"Besides saving gas, hybrid systems can also be used in high-performance cars to add additional power and to provide for quicker acceleration since electric motors can provide power to the wheels more quickly than gas engines.","Some manufacturers, such as Lamborghini, have said that current battery technology doesn’t allow for a optimum sports car performance from a purely electric vehicle.",2024-05-20 Why Jay Powell really wants to lower interest rates this September,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/investing/premarket-stocks-trading/index.html," Published 7:34 AM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","A version of this story first appeared in CNN Business’ Before the Bell newsletter. Not a subscriber? You can sign up right here. You can listen to an audio version of the newsletter by clicking the same link. Markets rallied to new record highs last week and the Dow crossed the 40,000 level for the first time in its 139-year history after inflation cooled for the first time in months, stoking hopes that the Federal Reserve could start cutting interest rates as soon as September. Fed officials tamped down some of the excitement during a full slate of public appearances where they repeated that inflation was still too high for their liking. So will the central bank lower interest rates or not this fall? That’s the billion dollar question. Before the Bell spoke with Tom Porcelli, chief US economist at PGIM Fixed Income, about what happens next and what it could mean for the economy. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. Did you think markets reacted appropriately to last week’s cooling inflation data?  It’s interesting to me that the equity market is cheering the idea that the Fed is going to be cutting rates. If the equity market is cheering the fact that the Fed is going to extend the current economic cycle by cutting rates a couple of times, I would agree with that. I just think we have to be careful. There tends to be a fine line between cutting rates and extending the economic cycle or cutting rates because the cycle is coming to an end (and the economy is softening). All investors are really going to have to grapple with that in the coming months. Our view is that you start cutting now and you actually can extend the cycle. What do you mean exactly by extending the cycle? When the Fed is cutting rates, it’s cutting rates because a recession is about to happen, right? That happens almost every single time where the Fed is cutting and recession is upon us. That’s why I say there’s a fine line between the Fed cutting to extend the cycle and the Fed cutting because a recession is about to happen. You really are threading a needle here. The Fed has been in this precarious space where they’re trying to avoid recession while lowering interest rates. How have they done in shaping a narrative around that?  I think you have to go back to last July. We were at 4.2%, from a core inflation perspective, that’s more than double the target rate. But the Fed decided that they were done with this hiking cycle. So when you hear about the dovish pivot that happened in December, it didn’t happen in December, it happened in July. (Fed Chair Jerome Powell) was taking a bit of a risk there, but part of why he shifted is because he recognized that the more aggressive the Fed goes from there, the greater damage they could do to the labor backdrop. He kept on highlighting in subsequent meetings that we cannot wait for inflation to get to 2%. Because then we run the risk of doing much more economic damage. He has tried to present themselves as a hawk. But in the end, I think Jay Powell is actually more of a dove. A lot of his actions, going back to July, are really consistent with that. I have a lot of sympathy for what he’s trying to do. He’s trying to engineer that ever elusive soft landing and I think he could succeed. When it comes to inflation, he can’t take his eye completely off the ball, but I know that labor is top of mind right now. Do you still think the Fed will cut rates in September?  If we’re right that Powell’s inclination is to cut, September is in play. And if we get a string of better inflation data between now and September, I don’t doubt for a second that September is in play. How does the November election come into play? If you go back and look over the past 10 election years, it becomes clear that the Fed does adjust policy during election years. Full stop. So I think it’s very fair to say that the Fed will respond to the economic reality on the ground and if the economic reality demands that the Fed adjust rates, even in an election year, even in an election month, the Fed will do it because the Fed has always done it. What happens if the Fed doesn’t cut? The longer we see no cuts, the greater the risk is that you see many cuts later. There are already some signs that the economic backdrop is already weakening. You can look at rising consumer delinquency rates as an example of how higher rates are starting to clamp down again. From a corporate perspective, companies are now in the midst of refinancing. They’re hitting a maturity speed bump with their debt. They’re refinancing at 1 or 2 percentage points higher than where they were pre-pandemic. That could feed through to the broader economic backdrop. Right now, we have a consumer that’s hanging in there, but they’re starting the process of slowing their spending. That means that you’re going to start to see some potential for margin compression. If you start to see margins compress in companies that are now refinancing at higher rates, you can exacerbate things. And so what do companies do? How do companies tackle margin compression, particularly if they’re not able to pass on costs to the same extent that they were in recent years? They do three things. From a labor perspective, they go after hours — hours are being cut right now. If that’s not enough, they try to lower wages, they’re doing that right now, too. And if those two things are not enough, then the last thing you do is you go after headcount. That to me is the risk if the Fed doesn’t cut anytime soon. You can add Mickey, Minnie, Donald and Goofy to the growing list of workers seeking better employment benefits, reports my colleague Eva Rothenberg. After three days of voting last week, 1,700 Disneyland Resort cast members who play characters around the theme park in Anaheim, California, as well as perform at parades, voted to unionize under Actors’ Equity Association, the union announced Saturday night. Equity described the vote as “a landslide victory,” with 953 cast members favoring unionization and 258 opposed. The group had announced a union organizing effort in February before filing for a vote with the National Labor Relations Board in April. There are more than 21,000 Disneyland “cast member” employees, who are represented by more than a dozen unions. Those unionized jobs include workers in retail, food service, security, pyrotechnic, and hair and makeup. Until now, employees dressing up as iconic Disney characters like Mickey Mouse, Cinderella, Snow White and Captain Hook have been excluded. “These workers are on the front lines of the Guest experience; they’re the human beings who create lifelong memories when your kids hug a character, or when your family watches a parade roll by the castle,” said Actors’ Equity Association President Kate Shindle in a statement. “The next step will be to collaborate with them about improving health & safety, wages, benefits, working conditions and job security.” The labor relations board is expected to certify the results next week, after which contract negotiations with The Walt Disney Company will begin. Equity said it does not know how long the bargaining process will take, adding Disney has been “relatively cooperative throughout this process.” Minnesota government officials have struck a deal with rideshare companies Uber and Lyft to set minimum wage standards for drivers, lawmakers announced Saturday night. The agreement is the culmination of nearly a year of back and forth between Democratic state officials and the two companies, who threatened to withdraw their businesses from Minnesota over a proposed Minneapolis ordinance that would grant rideshare drivers increased worker protections. The ordinance, initially adopted in August 2023, was part of a larger effort to grant more comprehensive benefits to contract workers, who take freelance work at digital platforms like DoorDash, Instacart, Uber and Lyft. It mandated drivers be paid at least $1.40 per mile and $0.51 per minute. The rule was delayed after Lyft and Uber warned they would leave Minneapolis. State lawmakers have been focused on compromising with the companies before a July 1 deadline. Under the new agreement, the statewide minimum wage rate for rideshare drivers will be $1.28 per mile and $0.31 per minute. The rule will override the higher rate the Minneapolis City Council had initially proposed. “When you take it as a blended rate, that results in a 20% increase in pay for drivers in the state of Minnesota,” the state’s Democratic House Majority Leader Jamie Long told reporters Saturday night. Read more here.",CNN,20/05/2024,"['A version of this story first appeared in CNN Business’ Before the Bell newsletter.', 'Not a subscriber?', 'You can sign upright here.', 'You can listen to an audio version of the newsletter by clicking the same link.', 'Markets rallied to new record highs last week and the Dow crossed the 40,000 level for the first time in its 139-year history after inflation cooled for the first time in months, stoking hopes that the Federal Reserve could start cutting interest rates as soon as September.', 'Fed officials tamped down some of the excitement during a full slate of public appearances where they repeated that inflation was still too high for their liking.', 'So will the central bank lower interest rates or not this fall?', 'That’s the billion dollar question.', 'Before the Bell spoke with Tom Porcelli, chief US economist at PGIM Fixed Income, about what happens next and what it could mean for the economy.', 'This interview has been edited for length and clarity.', 'Did you think markets reacted appropriately to last week’s cooling inflation data?', 'It’s interesting to me that the equity market is cheering the idea that the Fed is going to be cutting rates.', 'If the equity market is cheering the fact that the Fed is going to extend the current economic cycle by cutting rates a couple of times, I would agree with that.', 'I just think we have to be careful.', 'There tends to be a fine line between cutting rates and extending the economic cycle or cutting rates because the cycle is coming to an end (and the economy is softening).', 'All investors are really going to have to grapple with that in the coming months.', 'Our view is that you start cutting now and you actually can extend the cycle.', 'What do you mean exactly by extending the cycle?', 'When the Fed is cutting rates, it’s cutting rates because a recession is about to happen, right?', 'That happens almost every single time where the Fed is cutting and recession is upon us.', 'That’s why I say there’s a fine line between the Fed cutting to extend the cycle and the Fed cutting because a recession is about to happen.', 'You really are threading a needle here.', 'The Fed has been in this precarious space where they’re trying to avoid recession while lowering interest rates.', 'How have they done in shaping a narrative around that?', 'I think you have to go back to last July.', 'We were at 4.2%, from a core inflation perspective, that’s more than double the target rate.', 'But the Fed decided that they were done with this hiking cycle.', 'So when you hear about the dovish pivot that happened in December, it didn’t happen in December, it happened in July.', '(Fed Chair Jerome Powell) was taking a bit of a risk there, but part of why he shifted is because he recognized that the more aggressive the Fed goes from there, the greater damage they could do to the labor backdrop.', 'He kept on highlighting in subsequent meetings that we cannot wait for inflation to get to 2%.', 'Because then we run the risk of doing much more economic damage.', 'He has tried to present themselves as a hawk.', 'But in the end, I think Jay Powell is actually more of a dove.', 'A lot of his actions, going back to July, are really consistent with that.', 'I have a lot of sympathy for what he’s trying to do.', 'He’s trying to engineer that ever elusive soft landing and I think he could succeed.', 'When it comes to inflation, he can’t take his eye completely off the ball, but I know that labor is top of mind right now.', 'Do you still think the Fed will cut rates in September?', 'If we’re right that Powell’s inclination is to cut, September is in play.', 'And if we get a string of better inflation data between now and September, I don’t doubt for a second that September is in play.', 'How does the November election come into play?', 'If you go back and look over the past 10 election years, it becomes clear that the Fed does adjust policy during election years.', 'Full stop.', 'So I think it’s very fair to say that the Fed will respond to the economic reality on the ground and if the economic reality demands that the Fed adjust rates, even in an election year, even in an election month, the Fed will do it because the Fed has always done it.', 'What happens if the Fed doesn’t cut?', 'The longer we see no cuts, the greater the risk is that you see many cuts later.', 'There are already some signs that the economic backdrop is already weakening.', 'You can look at rising consumer delinquency rates as an example of how higher rates are starting to clamp down again.', 'From a corporate perspective, companies are now in the midst of refinancing.', 'They’re hitting a maturity speed bump with their debt.', 'They’re refinancing at 1 or 2 percentage points higher than where they were pre-pandemic.', 'That could feed through to the broader economic backdrop.', 'Right now, we have a consumer that’s hanging in there, but they’re starting the process of slowing their spending.', 'That means that you’re going to start to see some potential for margin compression.', 'If you start to see margins compress in companies that are now refinancing at higher rates, you can exacerbate things.', 'And so what do companies do?', 'How do companies tackle margin compression, particularly if they’re not able to pass on costs to the same extent that they were in recent years?', 'They do three things.', 'From a labor perspective, they go after hours — hours are being cut right now.', 'If that’s not enough, they try to lower wages, they’re doing that right now, too.', 'And if those two things are not enough, then the last thing you do is you go after headcount.', 'That to me is the risk if the Fed doesn’t cut anytime soon.', 'You can add Mickey, Minnie, Donald and Goofy to the growing list of workers seeking better employment benefits, reports my colleague Eva Rothenberg.', 'After three days of voting last week, 1,700 Disneyland Resort cast members who play characters around the theme park in Anaheim, California, as well as perform at parades, voted to unionize under Actors’ Equity Association, theunion announcedSaturday night.', 'Equity described the vote as “a landslide victory,” with 953 cast members favoring unionization and 258 opposed.', 'The group had announced a union organizing effort in February before filing for avote with the National Labor Relations Boardin April.', 'There are more than 21,000 Disneyland “cast member” employees, who are represented by more than a dozen unions.', 'Those unionized jobs include workers in retail, food service, security, pyrotechnic, and hair and makeup.', 'Until now, employees dressing up as iconic Disney characters like Mickey Mouse, Cinderella, Snow White and Captain Hook have been excluded.', '“These workers are on the front lines of the Guest experience; they’re the human beings who create lifelong memories when your kids hug a character, or when your family watches a parade roll by the castle,” said Actors’ Equity Association President Kate Shindle in a statement. “', 'The next step will be to collaborate with them about improving health & safety, wages, benefits, working conditions and job security.”', 'The labor relations board is expected to certify the results next week, after which contract negotiations with The Walt Disney Company will begin.', 'Equity said it does not know how long the bargaining process will take, adding Disney has been “relatively cooperative throughout this process.”', 'Minnesota government officials have struck a deal with rideshare companies Uber and Lyft to set minimum wage standards for drivers, lawmakers announced Saturday night.', 'The agreement is the culmination ofnearly a year of back and forthbetween Democratic state officials and the two companies, who threatened to withdraw their businesses from Minnesota over a proposed Minneapolis ordinance that would grant rideshare drivers increased worker protections.', 'The ordinance, initially adopted in August 2023, was part of a larger effort to grant more comprehensive benefits to contract workers, who takefreelance work at digital platformslike DoorDash, Instacart, Uber and Lyft.', 'It mandated drivers be paid at least $1.40 per mile and $0.51 per minute.', 'The rule was delayed afterLyft and Uber warned they would leave Minneapolis.', 'State lawmakers have been focused on compromising with the companies before a July 1 deadline.', 'Under the new agreement, the statewide minimum wage rate for rideshare drivers will be $1.28 per mile and $0.31 per minute.', 'The rule will override the higher rate the Minneapolis City Council had initially proposed.', '“When you take it as a blended rate, that results in a 20% increase in pay for drivers in the state of Minnesota,” the state’s DemocraticHouse Majority Leader Jamie Long told reporters Saturday night.', 'Read more here.']",0.0615464350002398,"The next step will be to collaborate with them about improving health & safety, wages, benefits, working conditions and job security.”",Because then we run the risk of doing much more economic damage.,0.2073645194371541,"Markets rallied to new record highs last week and the Dow crossed the 40,000 level for the first time in its 139-year history after inflation cooled for the first time in months, stoking hopes that the Federal Reserve could start cutting interest rates as soon as September.",There are already some signs that the economic backdrop is already weakening.,2024-05-20 How to make high interest rates work for your hard-earned savings,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/20/success/interest-rates-savings-cash/index.html," Published 3:00 PM EDT, Wed March 20, 2024 ","The Federal Reserve’s benchmark interest rate remains at a 23-year high. That’s thanks to the central bank’s decision Wednesday to once again hold it steady, as it has done at the policy-making committee’s past five meetings. That decision may be disappointing to some investors, homebuyers and those with a lot of credit card debt, since movement in the Fed’s overnight lending rate influences rates — directly or indirectly — on consumer financial products (e.g., credit cards, bank loans and mortgages). But with the Fed signaling that no rate cuts are likely until summer, it also means anyone with savings still has at least a few more months to make hay of their stash. That’s because you can still get inflation-beating interest rates that will grow any money you have set aside for emergencies, vacations, down payments or any other goal in your sights over the next several years. However, that won’t happen if you just let it sit in a traditional checking or savings account that yields next to nothing. There are more lucrative, low-risk options out there, with rates that are still at or near their peaks. “But perhaps not for much longer,” said Ted Rossman, senior analyst at Bankrate. “If one of those fits into your financial plans, it’s best to act soon.” So, consider the following options when deciding where to park your hard-earned savings. The average annual percentage yield on bank savings accounts was just 0.52% as of March 13, according to Bankrate. That average is kept low by the biggest brick-and-mortar banks like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, which still are offering a paltry 0.01%. By contrast, there are still FDIC-insured online banks offering inflation-beating rates of between 4.35% and 5.35% on their high-yield savings accounts. Generally speaking, these are the best vehicles in which to keep your emergency funds for quick, easy access. Choosing between an account that pays 0.52% and one that pays 5.35% can mean forfeiting hundreds of dollars in interest. “If you put $10,000 in a savings account, that’s a difference of $496 in interest earnings over the course of the year, assuming monthly compounding,” Rossman said. While the rates on high-yield savings accounts have gone down a bit in recent months, “widespread cuts in online savings account rates are unlikely until the first Fed rate cut is near,” said Ken Tumin, founder of DepositAccounts.com. As with any bank savings rate, high-yield savings account rates can change overnight, and the bank may not alert you when it lowers it. So make sure to check your monthly statement. Another high-return, low-risk investment that is great for money you likely won’t need to tap for a few months or even a couple of years is a certificate of deposit. You can get the best returns on CDs through a brokerage such as Schwab, E*Trade or Fidelity. That’s because you can comparison shop for CDs from any number of FDIC-insured banks and will not have to set up individual accounts with each institution. As of March 13, the average rate on a one-year CD was 1.95%, but some banks are offering as much are 5.4%. If you can get a one-year CD at, say, 5.4%, you will make $540 on a $10,000 investment. To get the greatest benefit from a CD, you have to leave the money invested for a fixed period. You can always access your principal sooner if you need to, but there may be early withdrawal penalties. As of March 20, CDs listed on Schwab.com with durations from three months up to three years were all yielding between 5.2% and 5.51%. CD rates on durations between four and 10 years ranged from 4.40% to 5.15%. Say you invest $10,000 in a one-year CD with a 5.36% APY. At the end of that period, you’d get your principal back plus $536 in interest when the CD matures, according to Bankrate’s CD calculator. If you chose a two-year CD at 5.25%, you’d bank an extra $1,078, assuming compounding interest. The same investment in a five-year CD at 5.15% would earn $2,854. “It makes sense to go long with CDs. To hedge your bets, include terms from one to five years. Starting a CD ladder will provide this mix,” Tumin said. If you don’t go through a brokerage you may get a reasonable deal from your primary bank, Tumin said. For example, he noted, Wells Fargo is still offering up to 5.01% on both 4-month and 7-month CDs. Or, at Bank of America, you can get up to 4.75% on a 7-month CD. But Tumin cautions that with any big bank CD you should take your money out at the end of the term, otherwise your bank may automatically renew it and lock you in to a much lower-yielding CD. If you don’t want to set up an online savings account at another bank, your own bank may offer you a money market deposit account that pays a higher yield than your regular checking or savings accounts. Money market accounts may have higher minimum deposit requirements than a regular savings account, but they are more liquid than a fixed-term certificate of deposit or Treasury bill, meaning they give you access to your money more quickly while still potentially giving you some of the highest yields available, said Doug Ornstein, senior manager for integrated solutions at TIAA Wealth Management. But don’t confuse money market accounts with money market mutual funds, which invest in short-term, low-risk debt instruments. As of March 19, they had an average 7-day yield of 5.14%, according to the Crane Money Fund Index, which tracks the top 100 taxable money market funds. Unlike money market deposit accounts, money market mutual funds are not insured by the FDIC. But if you invest in a money market fund through a brokerage, your overall account is likely to be insured through the Securities Investor Protection Corp, which offers protection in the event your brokerage ever goes under. Another option for money you can leave untouched anywhere from several months to a few years is to buy short-term Treasury bills and medium-term notes, which are backed by the full faith and credit of the United States. Three- and six-month bills had yields of 5.39% and 5.33% respectively on March 20 before the Fed’s meeting ended, while nine-month and one-year bills were offering 5.19% and 5.08% respectively, according to rates posted on Schwab.com for a $25,000 investment. Rates on Treasury notes with durations from two years to 10 years ranged between 4.29% and 4.72%. If you’re someone who manages your portfolio like a hawk, you may feel comfortable buying T-bills on your own from TreasuryDirect.gov. But if you don’t, it might be easier just to buy new issues through your brokerage account or invest in a short-term bond index fund or ETF, said Andy Smith, executive director of financial planning at Edelman Financial Engines. And if you’re looking at money that will be needed in three to five years, you might consider a diversified fund of highly rated government and corporate bonds, Ornstein said. An 18-month AAA-rated corporate bond, for instance, was yielding 4.82% this week, while the three-year was at 4.49%. Meanwhile, three-year AAA-rated municipal bonds (which are issued by local governments) had a rate of 3.98%, according to Schwab.com. When deciding on the best accounts and investments for your specific goals and peace of mind, it may pay to consult a fee-only fiduciary adviser — meaning, someone who doesn’t get paid a commission to sell you a particular investment. What you’ll always want to do is build in flexibility for yourself so you can easily access cash, regardless of your timeline for key goals. “What happens if something changes and you need that down payment a lot sooner — or your parents need medical care fast?” Smith said. That means balancing your desire for great yield with a need and desire for ease of access without penalty. Translation: Don’t chase yield for yield’s sake. Think of it this way, Ornstein said: Unless you have huge sums to invest or are an institutional investor, the difference between getting a 5.1% yield versus 5% is negligible, and in fact it could even cost you more if there are penalties for taking your money out early. “Most of the time convenience is really important. Give up the 0.1%,” he advised.",CNN,20/03/2024,"['The Federal Reserve’s benchmark interest rate remains at a 23-year high.', 'That’s thanks to the central bank’s decision Wednesday to once again hold it steady, as it has done at the policy-making committee’s past five meetings.', 'That decision may be disappointing to some investors, homebuyers and those with a lot of credit card debt, since movement in the Fed’s overnight lending rate influences rates — directly or indirectly — on consumer financial products (e.g., credit cards, bank loans and mortgages).', 'Butwith the Fed signaling that no rate cuts are likely until summer, it also means anyone with savings still has at least a few more months to make hay of their stash.', 'That’s because you can still get inflation-beating interest rates that will grow any money you have set aside for emergencies, vacations, down payments or any other goal in your sights over the next several years.', 'However, that won’t happen if you just let it sit in a traditional checking or savings account that yields next to nothing.', 'There are more lucrative, low-risk options out there, with rates that are still at or near their peaks. “', 'But perhaps not for much longer,” said Ted Rossman, senior analyst at Bankrate. “', 'If one of those fits into your financial plans, it’s best to act soon.”', 'So, consider the following options when deciding where to park your hard-earned savings.', 'The average annual percentage yield on bank savings accounts was just 0.52% as of March 13, according to Bankrate.', 'That average is kept low by the biggest brick-and-mortar banks like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, which still are offering a paltry 0.01%.', 'By contrast, there are still FDIC-insured online banks offering inflation-beating rates of between 4.35% and 5.35% on their high-yield savings accounts.', 'Generally speaking, these are the best vehicles in which to keep your emergency funds for quick, easy access.', 'Choosing between an account that pays 0.52% and one that pays 5.35% can mean forfeiting hundreds of dollars in interest. “', 'If you put $10,000 in a savings account, that’s a difference of $496 in interest earnings over the course of the year, assuming monthly compounding,” Rossman said.', 'While the rates on high-yield savings accounts have gone down a bit in recent months, “widespread cuts in online savings account rates are unlikely until the first Fed rate cut is near,” said Ken Tumin, founder of DepositAccounts.com.', 'As with any bank savings rate, high-yield savings accountratescan change overnight, and the bank may not alert you when it lowers it.', 'So make sure to check your monthly statement.', 'Another high-return, low-risk investment that is great for money you likely won’t need to tap for a few months or even a couple of years is a certificate of deposit.', 'You can get the best returns on CDs through a brokerage such as Schwab, E*Trade or Fidelity.', 'That’s because you can comparison shop for CDs from any number of FDIC-insured banks and will not have to set up individual accounts with each institution.', 'As of March 13, the average rate on a one-year CD was 1.95%, but some banks are offering as much are 5.4%.', 'If you can get a one-year CD at, say, 5.4%, you will make $540 on a $10,000 investment.', 'To get the greatest benefit from a CD, you have to leave the money invested for a fixed period.', 'You can always access your principal sooner if you need to, but there may be early withdrawal penalties.', 'As of March 20, CDs listed on Schwab.com with durations from three months up to three years were all yielding between 5.2% and 5.51%.', 'CD rates on durations between four and 10 years ranged from 4.40% to 5.15%.', 'Say you invest $10,000 in a one-year CD with a 5.36%APY.', 'At the end of that period, you’d get your principal back plus $536 in interest when the CD matures, according to Bankrate’s CD calculator.', 'If you chose a two-year CD at 5.25%, you’d bank an extra $1,078, assuming compounding interest.', 'The same investment in a five-year CD at 5.15% would earn $2,854.', '“It makes sense to go long with CDs.', 'To hedge your bets, include terms from one to five years.', 'Starting a CD ladder will provide this mix,” Tumin said.', 'If you don’t go through a brokerage you may get a reasonable deal from your primary bank, Tumin said.', 'For example, he noted, Wells Fargo is still offering up to 5.01% on both 4-month and 7-month CDs.', 'Or, at Bank of America, you can get up to 4.75% on a 7-month CD.', 'But Tumin cautions that with any big bank CD you should take your money out at the end of the term, otherwise your bank may automatically renew it and lock you in to a much lower-yielding CD.', 'If you don’t want to set up an online savings account at another bank, your own bank may offer you a money market deposit account that pays a higher yield than your regular checking or savings accounts.', 'Money market accounts may have higher minimum deposit requirements than a regular savings account, but they are more liquid than a fixed-term certificate of deposit or Treasury bill, meaning they give you access to your money more quickly while still potentially giving you some of the highest yields available, said Doug Ornstein, senior manager for integrated solutions at TIAA Wealth Management.', 'But don’t confuse money market accounts with money market mutual funds, which invest in short-term, low-risk debt instruments.', 'As of March 19, they had an average 7-day yield of 5.14%, according to the Crane Money Fund Index, which tracks the top 100 taxable money market funds.', 'Unlike money market deposit accounts, money market mutual funds are not insured by the FDIC.', 'But if you invest in a money market fund through a brokerage, your overall account is likely to be insured through the Securities Investor Protection Corp, which offers protection in the event your brokerage ever goes under.', 'Another option for money you can leave untouched anywhere from several months to a few years is to buy short-term Treasury bills and medium-term notes, which are backed by the full faith and credit of the United States.', 'Three- and six-month bills had yields of 5.39% and 5.33%respectively on March 20 before the Fed’s meeting ended, while nine-month and one-year bills were offering 5.19% and 5.08%respectively, according to rates posted on Schwab.com for a $25,000 investment.', 'Rates on Treasury notes with durations from two years to 10 years ranged between 4.29% and 4.72%.', 'If you’re someone who manages your portfolio like a hawk, you may feel comfortable buying T-bills on your own from TreasuryDirect.gov.', 'But if you don’t, it might be easier just to buy new issues through your brokerage account or invest in a short-term bond index fund or ETF, said Andy Smith, executive director of financial planning at Edelman Financial Engines.', 'And if you’re looking at money that will be needed in three to five years, you might consider a diversified fund of highly rated government and corporate bonds, Ornstein said.', 'An 18-month AAA-rated corporate bond, for instance, was yielding 4.82% this week, while the three-year was at 4.49%.', 'Meanwhile, three-year AAA-rated municipal bonds (which are issued by local governments) had a rate of 3.98%, according to Schwab.com.', 'When deciding on the best accounts and investments for your specific goals and peace of mind, it may pay to consult a fee-only fiduciary adviser — meaning, someone who doesn’t get paid a commission to sell you a particular investment.', 'What you’ll always want to do is build in flexibility for yourself so you can easily access cash, regardless of your timeline for key goals. “', 'What happens if something changes and you need that down payment a lot sooner — or your parents need medical care fast?”', 'Smith said.', 'That means balancing your desire for great yield with a need and desire for ease of access without penalty.', 'Translation: Don’t chase yield for yield’s sake.', 'Think of it this way, Ornstein said: Unless you have huge sums to invest or are an institutional investor, the difference between getting a 5.1% yield versus 5% is negligible, and in fact it could even cost you more if there are penalties for taking your money out early. “', 'Most of the time convenience is really important.', 'Give up the 0.1%,” he advised.']",0.1607169988950149,That means balancing your desire for great yield with a need and desire for ease of access without penalty.,"But don’t confuse money market accounts with money market mutual funds, which invest in short-term, low-risk debt instruments.",0.3840319812297821,"For example, he noted, Wells Fargo is still offering up to 5.01% on both 4-month and 7-month CDs.","That decision may be disappointing to some investors, homebuyers and those with a lot of credit card debt, since movement in the Fed’s overnight lending rate influences rates — directly or indirectly — on consumer financial products (e.g., credit cards, bank loans and mortgages).",2024-05-20 "Ivan Boesky, famed trader in 1980s insider trading scandal, dies at 87",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/investing/ivan-boesky-dies-wall-street/index.html," Published 2:32 PM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","Ivan Boesky, the infamous insider trader whose name became synonymous with financial greed and helped inspire the fictional character Gordon Gekko in the 1987 film “Wall Street,” has died at his home in the La Jolla neighborhood of San Diego. He was 87. His daughter, Marianne Boesky, confirmed to CNN on Monday that he died in his sleep. “A dedicated and loving father above all else. A beautiful soul who inspired me to work hard, care harder, and always remain curious,” read a caption on a Monday Instagram post by the account associated with Marianne Boesky’s art gallery. Boesky famously said in a 1986 commencement speech at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley, that “greed is healthy,” inspiring in part to Gekko’s “greed is good” speech. Nicknamed “Ivan the Terrible” on a 1986 Time Magazine cover, Boesky profited from the corporate takeover boom in the 1980s, using insider information to receive advanced information on pending deals. When investigators began catching whiff of his activities, along with that of “junk bond king” Michael Milken, he agreed to cooperate with the federal government as they investigated insider trading on Wall Street, which had become a concern for the SEC by the early 1980s. He recorded calls and meetings, including with Milken, and taught investigators about stock manipulation, takeover bids and corporate raids, according to the SEC Historical Society. He pleaded guilty in 1986 to insider trading and was sentenced to three years of prison and fined $100 million, half of which went to returning the profits he made from insider trading and the other half as a civil penalty. Boesky was barred from securities trading for the rest of his life. The son of a delicatessen owner in Detroit, Boesky began his Wall Street career as a stock analyst at New York investment bank L.F. Rothschild after graduating from the Detroit College of Law in 1964. By 1975, he would open up his own brokerage firm, Ivan F. Boesky & Company, which his wife’s family helped finance. By the spring of 1985, he was reportedly the highest-paid broker on Wall Street with a net worth over $280 million (roughly $820 million in 2024). He is survived by his wife Ana, his five children and four grandchildren.",CNN,20/05/2024,"['Ivan Boesky, the infamous insider trader whose name became synonymous with financial greed and helped inspire the fictional character Gordon Gekko in the 1987 film “Wall Street,” has died at his home in the La Jolla neighborhood of San Diego.', 'He was 87.', 'His daughter, Marianne Boesky, confirmed to CNN on Monday that he died in his sleep.', '“A dedicated and loving father above all else.', 'A beautiful soul who inspired me to work hard, care harder, and always remain curious,” read a caption on a Monday Instagram post by the account associated with Marianne Boesky’s art gallery.', 'Boesky famously said in a 1986 commencement speech at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley, that “greed is healthy,” inspiring in part to Gekko’s “greed is good” speech.', 'Nicknamed “Ivan the Terrible” on a 1986 Time Magazine cover, Boesky profited from the corporate takeover boom in the 1980s, using insider information to receive advanced information on pending deals.', 'When investigators began catching whiff of his activities, along with that of “junk bond king” Michael Milken, he agreed to cooperate with the federal government as they investigated insider trading on Wall Street, which had become a concern for the SEC by the early 1980s.', 'He recorded calls and meetings, including with Milken, and taught investigators about stock manipulation, takeover bids and corporate raids, according to the SEC Historical Society.', 'He pleaded guilty in 1986 to insider trading and was sentenced to three years of prison and fined $100 million, half of which went to returning the profits he made from insider trading and the other half as a civil penalty.', 'Boesky was barred from securities trading for the rest of his life.', 'The son of a delicatessen owner in Detroit, Boesky began his Wall Street career as a stock analyst at New York investment bank L.F. Rothschild after graduating from the Detroit College of Law in 1964.', 'By 1975, he would open up his own brokerage firm, Ivan F. Boesky & Company, which his wife’s family helped finance.', 'By the spring of 1985, he was reportedly the highest-paid broker on Wall Street with a net worth over $280 million (roughly $820 million in 2024).', 'He is survived by his wife Ana, his five children and four grandchildren.']",0.1086546545324258,"A beautiful soul who inspired me to work hard, care harder, and always remain curious,” read a caption on a Monday Instagram post by the account associated with Marianne Boesky’s art gallery.","He pleaded guilty in 1986 to insider trading and was sentenced to three years of prison and fined $100 million, half of which went to returning the profits he made from insider trading and the other half as a civil penalty.",0.9994584918022156,"Boesky famously said in a 1986 commencement speech at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley, that “greed is healthy,” inspiring in part to Gekko’s “greed is good” speech.",,2024-05-20 "NBC hires former RNC chair Ronna McDaniel, who has demonized the press and refused to acknowledge Biden was fairly elected",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/22/media/ronna-mcdaniel-nbc/index.html," Published 1:53 PM EDT, Fri March 22, 2024 ","NBC News on Friday announced that it had hired Ronna McDaniel, the former Republican National Committee chair who has repeatedly attacked the network and its journalists, assailed the news media as “fake news” and promoted false claims around the 2020 vote, as an on-air commentator ahead of the 2024 presidential election. “It couldn’t be a more important moment to have a voice like Ronna’s on the team,” Carrie Budoff Brown, senior vice president of politics at NBC News, said in a memo to staff. McDaniel exited the RNC earlier this month after leading the organization since 2016. During her time as chair, McDaniel repeatedly attacked the press, which has become increasingly popular in Republican circles over the last several years as Donald Trump demonizes journalists and news institutions. McDaniel echoed many such attacks, labeling the press as “fake news” and calling the media “corrupt.” At times, she even targeted NBC News and MSNBC with dishonest attacks. In 2019, for instance, McDaniel accused Richard Engel, NBC News’ chief foreign correspondent, of “actively cheering for an economic downturn.” “How can NBC let him keep his job when he’s made his bias so clear?” McDaniel asked. McDaniel has a lengthier history attacking the progressive cable news channel MSNBC, which she will appear on in her new role. In recent years, she has repeatedly attacked the channel for “spreading lies” and blasted those she described as the network’s “primetime propagandists.” An NBC spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment about her attacks on the news media and NBC. In her role as RNC chief, McDaniel also fanned the flames of election denialism after the 2020 presidential contest. McDaniel was involved in a phone call in 2020 to pressure Michigan county officials not to certify the vote from the Detroit area, where Joe Biden had a commanding lead. McDaniel told the officials, regarding the certification: “Do not sign it. … We will get you attorneys.” The Michigan Department of State’s office condemned her claims of supposed voter fraud in the wake of the election, stating they had “no merit.” The state’s “elections were conducted fairly, effectively and transparently and are an accurate reflection of the will of Michigan voters,” it said in a detailed fact check posted online. In an interview with CNN’s Chris Wallace last year, McDaniel defended her claims of voting “irregularity” in the election. “I think saying that there were problems with 2020 is very real. I don’t think that’s election denying,” McDaniel told Wallace. “I’m from Wayne County. We had a woman send a note saying I’m being told to backdate ballots. We had to look into that. That’s deeply concerning. When you have friends who are poll-watching and being kicked out, that’s deeply concerning. We have every right to look at that.” In the interview, Wallace pressed McDaniel if she believed Biden legitimately won the election. “I think there were lots of problems with 2020. Ultimately, he won the election but there were lots of problems with the 2020 election,” she said. “But I don’t think he won it fair. I don’t. I’m not going to say that.” NBC’s hiring of McDaniel, however, plays into a recent trend at the network’s outlets, which has seemingly softened its stance on Trump as he inches toward the Republican nomination for president. Earlier this month, CNBC hosted Trump for a lengthy phone interview in which the network’s anchors allowed him to peddle lies and conspiracy theories on air without scrutiny. MSNBC has even started carrying Trump’s remarks live on television, a practice that the network boasted for years it would not do. Star host Rachel Maddow, who has said carrying Trump’s lies on the air is dangerous, even objected to the network broadcasting a recent speech from the presumptive Republican nominee, calling it “irresponsible.”",CNN,22/03/2024,"['NBC News on Friday announced that it had hired Ronna McDaniel, the former Republican National Committee chair who has repeatedlyattacked the network and its journalists,assailed thenewsmedia as “fake news” and promoted false claims around the 2020vote,as an on-air commentatorahead of the 2024 presidential election.', '“It couldn’t be a more important moment to have a voice like Ronna’s on the team,” Carrie Budoff Brown, senior vice president of politics at NBC News, said in a memoto staff.', 'McDaniel exited the RNC earlier this month after leading the organization since 2016.', 'During her time as chair, McDaniel repeatedly attacked the press, which has become increasingly popular in Republican circles over the last several years as Donald Trump demonizes journalists and news institutions.', 'McDaniel echoed many such attacks, labeling the press as “fake news” and calling the media “corrupt.”', 'At times, she even targeted NBC Newsand MSNBCwith dishonest attacks.', 'In 2019, for instance, McDaniel accused Richard Engel, NBC News’ chief foreign correspondent, of “actively cheering for an economic downturn.”', '“How can NBC let him keep his job when he’s made his bias so clear?”', 'McDaniel asked.', 'McDaniel has a lengthier history attacking the progressive cable news channel MSNBC, which she will appear on in her new role.', 'In recent years, she has repeatedly attacked the channel for “spreading lies” and blasted those she described as the network’s “primetime propagandists.”', 'An NBC spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment about her attacks on the news media and NBC.', 'In her role as RNC chief, McDaniel also fanned the flames of election denialism after the 2020 presidential contest.', 'McDaniel was involved in a phone call in 2020 to pressure Michigan county officials not to certify the vote from the Detroit area, where Joe Biden had a commanding lead.', 'McDanieltold the officials, regarding the certification: “Do not sign it. …', 'We will get you attorneys.”', 'The Michigan Department of State’s office condemned her claims of supposed voter fraud in the wake of the election, stating they had “no merit.', '”The state’s “elections were conducted fairly, effectively and transparently and are an accurate reflection of the will of Michigan voters,” it said in adetailed fact checkposted online.', 'In an interview with CNN’s Chris Wallace last year, McDaniel defended her claims of voting “irregularity” in the election.', '“I think saying that there were problems with 2020 is very real.', 'I don’t think that’s election denying,” McDaniel told Wallace. “', 'I’m from Wayne County.', 'We had a woman send a note saying I’m being told to backdate ballots.', 'We had to look into that.', 'That’s deeply concerning.', 'When you have friends who are poll-watching and being kicked out, that’s deeply concerning.', 'We have every right to look at that.”', 'In the interview,Wallace pressed McDaniel if she believed Biden legitimately won the election.', '“I think there were lots of problems with 2020.', 'Ultimately, he won the electionbut there were lots of problems with the 2020 election,” she said. “', 'But I don’t think he won it fair.', 'I don’t.', 'I’m not going to say that.”', 'NBC’s hiring of McDaniel, however, plays into a recent trend at thenetwork’s outlets, which has seemingly softened its stance on Trump as he inches toward the Republican nomination for president.', 'Earlier this month, CNBC hosted Trump for a lengthy phone interview in which the network’s anchors allowed him to peddle lies and conspiracy theories on airwithout scrutiny.', 'MSNBC has even started carrying Trump’s remarks live on television, a practice that the network boasted for years it would not do.', 'Star host Rachel Maddow, who has said carrying Trump’s lieson the airis dangerous, even objected to the network broadcasting a recent speech from the presumptive Republican nominee, calling it “irresponsible.”']",-0.069193576701305,But I don’t think he won it fair.,"At times, she even targeted NBC Newsand MSNBCwith dishonest attacks.",-0.2803101042906443,"NBC’s hiring of McDaniel, however, plays into a recent trend at thenetwork’s outlets, which has seemingly softened its stance on Trump as he inches toward the Republican nomination for president.",“I think there were lots of problems with 2020.,2024-05-20 Post Office Horizon IT scandal: Alan Bates rejects second offer,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cjr74ezvpq0o,2024-05-17T10:31:43.785Z,"Former sub-postmaster and campaigner Alan Bates has rejected his second offer of compensation for the Post Office Horizon IT scandal. His first offer in January, which he described as ""cruel"" and ""derisory"", was about a sixth of what he had claimed. The latest offer amounted to around a third of what he requested, with Mr Bates telling the BBC ""it's frustrating for myself, frustrating for everyone."" Separately, the inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal heard that Jane MacLeod, the Post Office's former general counsel, ""won't co-operate"", according to a lawyer for the inquiry. Jason Beer KC said that the inquiry would not be hearing from Ms MacLeod as planned because ""she lives abroad and won't co-operate"". Ms MacLeod was the top internal lawyer at the Post Office at the time of the Alan Bates vs Post Office Ltd court case. The BBC has tried to contact Ms MacLeod for comment. Alan Bates' fight for justice inspired ITV’s Mr Bates vs The Post Office drama. Between 1999 and 2015, more than 900 sub-postmasters were wrongly prosecuted after faulty software indicated that money was missing from Post Office branch accounts. Mr Bates leads the Justice for Subpostmasters Alliance, campaigning for financial address for the hundreds of victims who took part in the group legal action against the Post Office. Their compensation was swallowed up by the huge legal costs in bringing their case. The government went on to set up a specific compensation fund to give these sub-postmasters the same financial redress as everyone else. But progress has been slow. Mr Bates is warning he will have to ""look at other ways to progress the redress"" if the Department of Business and Trade does not sort things out. He also highlighted the most recent Post Office Horizon compensation data. As of 24 April 2024, 146 offers have been accepted and 138 of these have accepted offers of the £75,000 fixed payment. Mr Bates says the vast majority of the bigger and most complex cases, some 300 of them, have still to be sorted. ""It's just not working quickly enough. People have lost 20 years of their lives and they're still hanging on... we've also lost 70 odd people along the way."" ""These delays are causing all sorts of problems for the families involved."" On Friday, the Post Office inquiry was told by its former finance director that the company maintained an “unacceptable relationship” with postmasters. Alisdair Cameron said the relationship with the postmasters was “self-serving” and based on an imbalance of power. He said he thought it was established now that the original prosecutions of subpostmasters were “a deliberate miscarriage of justice."" Mr Cameron said senior management should have settled the claims, apologised and moved on years ago. He said the Post Office had been over-reliant on its flawed Horizon IT system “when we knew its weaknesses”. “We have defended ourselves to avoid the consequences. A waste of public money and a postponement of justice.” Mr Cameron, who joined the Post Office in 2015 and worked closely with then chief executive Paula Vennells, sat on the sub-committee of the Post Office board that oversaw its defence to the group litigation in 2018-19 led by Alan Bates. At the start of his session, he gave an apology: “I am sorry that when I joined the Post Office in 2015, I accepted without challenging the evidence that there had been no miscarriages of justice in the earlier prosecutions which caused so much devastation to postmasters and their families. “As a member of the GLO [group litigation order] sub-committee, I am sorry I did not push against the lack of challenge and testing of Post Office’s legal case. Had I done better in these things, we might have started the process of getting justice for postmasters earlier. “I hope that my statement and evidence today assists the inquiry in its investigations and in getting to the truth which is the least that those affected deserve.” Mr Cameron was asked about a ‘Strictly Confidential’ document titled “What went wrong?”, written by him in November 2020, which set out the criticisms faced by the Post Office after it lost the litigation brought by 555 subpostmasters. In it he said that at the heart of what went wrong, the “original sin” of the Post Office was “our culture, self-absorbed and defensive”, which “stopped us from dealing with Postmasters in a straightforward and acceptable way.” The document revealed his estimate of the total cost to the Post Office of the scandal at the time was £1-£1.5bn. ",BBC,17/05/2024,"['Former sub-postmaster and campaigner Alan Bates has rejected his second offer of compensation for the Post Office Horizon IT scandal.', 'His first offer in January, which he described as ""cruel"" and ""derisory"", was about a sixth of what he had claimed.', 'The latest offer amounted to around a third of what he requested, with Mr Bates telling the BBC ""it\'s frustrating for myself, frustrating for everyone.""', 'Separately, the inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal heard that Jane MacLeod, the Post Office\'s former general counsel, ""won\'t co-operate"", according to a lawyer for the inquiry.', 'Jason Beer KC said that the inquiry would not be hearing from Ms MacLeod as planned because ""she lives abroad and won\'t co-operate"".', 'Ms MacLeod was the top internal lawyer at the Post Office at the time of the Alan Bates vs Post Office Ltd court case.', 'The BBC has tried to contact Ms MacLeod for comment.', ""Alan Bates' fight for justice inspired ITV’s Mr Bates vs The Post Office drama."", 'Between 1999 and 2015, more than 900 sub-postmasters were wrongly prosecuted after faulty software indicated that money was missing from Post Office branch accounts.', 'Mr Bates leads the Justice for Subpostmasters Alliance, campaigning for financial address for the hundreds of victims who took part in the group legal action against the Post Office.', 'Their compensation was swallowed up by the huge legal costs in bringing their case.', 'The government went on to set up a specific compensation fund to give these sub-postmasters the same financial redress as everyone else.', 'But progress has been slow.', 'Mr Bates is warning he will have to ""look at other ways to progress the redress"" if the Department of Business and Trade does not sort things out.', 'He also highlighted the most recent Post Office Horizon compensation data.', 'As of 24 April 2024, 146 offers have been accepted and 138 of these have accepted offers of the £75,000 fixed payment.', 'Mr Bates says the vast majority of the bigger and most complex cases, some 300 of them, have still to be sorted. ""', ""It's just not working quickly enough."", 'People have lost 20 years of their lives and they\'re still hanging on... we\'ve also lost 70 odd people along the way."" ""', 'These delays are causing all sorts of problems for the families involved.""', 'On Friday, the Post Office inquiry was told by its former finance director that the company maintained an “unacceptable relationship” with postmasters.', 'Alisdair Cameron said the relationship with the postmasters was “self-serving” and based on an imbalance of power.', 'He said he thought it was established now that the original prosecutions of subpostmasters were “a deliberate miscarriage of justice.""', 'Mr Cameron said senior management should have settled the claims, apologised and moved on years ago.', 'He said the Post Office had been over-reliant on its flawed Horizon IT system “when we knew its weaknesses”. “', 'We have defended ourselves to avoid the consequences.', 'A waste of public money and a postponement of justice.”', 'Mr Cameron, who joined the Post Office in 2015 and worked closely with then chief executive Paula Vennells, sat on the sub-committee of the Post Office board that oversaw its defence to the group litigation in 2018-19 led by Alan Bates.', 'At the start of his session, he gave an apology: “I am sorry that when I joined the Post Office in 2015, I accepted without challenging the evidence that there had been no miscarriages of justice in the earlier prosecutions which caused so much devastation to postmasters and their families. “', 'As a member of the GLO [group litigation order] sub-committee, I am sorry I did not push against the lack of challenge and testing of Post Office’s legal case.', 'Had I done better in these things, we might have started the process of getting justice for postmasters earlier. “', 'I hope that my statement and evidence today assists the inquiry in its investigations and in getting to the truth which is the least that those affected deserve.”', 'Mr Cameron was asked about a ‘Strictly Confidential’ document titled “What went wrong?”,', 'written by him in November 2020, which set out the criticisms faced by the Post Office after it lost the litigation brought by 555 subpostmasters.', 'In it he said that at the heart of what went wrong, the “original sin” of the Post Office was “our culture, self-absorbed and defensive”, which “stopped us from dealing with Postmasters in a straightforward and acceptable way.”', 'The document revealed his estimate of the total cost to the Post Office of the scandal at the time was £1-£1.5bn.']",-0.0928547602815271,"Had I done better in these things, we might have started the process of getting justice for postmasters earlier. “",Former sub-postmaster and campaigner Alan Bates has rejected his second offer of compensation for the Post Office Horizon IT scandal.,-0.6515941619873047,"Had I done better in these things, we might have started the process of getting justice for postmasters earlier. “",But progress has been slow.,2024-05-20 More people are turning 65 this year than ever before. That has sparked a gold rush for the retirement industry,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/18/business/retirement-plan-insurance-annuities/index.html," Published 2:00 PM EDT, Sat May 18, 2024 ","More Americans are turning 65 this year than ever before, and that number is set to creep even higher over the next few years. It’s fueling a huge rollout of new retirement products — but they’re not all golden tickets. An average of 11,200 Americans will reach that traditional retirement age each day in 2024, according to a recent report by the Alliance for Lifetime Income. This surge, along with new legislation that took effect recently, has led to a growing number of financial products that promise paychecks for life, no matter how long you live. But some options are difficult to reverse and, since some plans are so new, the benefits and shortfalls have not been thoroughly researched. Although she plans to stop working in about a decade, Jennifer Messina, a 51-year-old administrative assistant in Nutley, New Jersey, said she isn’t worried about retirement because her husband’s job affords them a union-sponsored annuity (an insurance product that pays out income) and a pension plan. With defined benefit pensions, the burden of saving and investing for retirement falls on the employer, not on employees. These plans generally offer employees payments for life, depending on that person’s salary and how long they were with the company. “I’m really fortunate,” Messina said. “We didn’t really save much of anything.” However, jobs offering pension plans are harder to come by compared to previous decades. Over the past 40 years, defined contribution plans, also known as 401(k) plans, have taken their place. Americans currently hold over $7 trillion in 401(k) plans, according to data from the Investment Company Institute, a trade association. These types of retirement plans put the job of saving and investing on the employee. With 401(k) plans, it’s up to retirees to ensure they don’t run out of money. Many people aren’t able to save adequately for retirement so that potentially leaves them heavily reliant on the Social Security benefits they accrued in their working years – and those benefits aren’t huge. The average retiree’s monthly check this year is $1,915, according to the Social Security Administration. And even retirees with the highest earnings during their careers are getting somewhere between $2,710 and $4,873 depending on the age they are when they retire. In addition, millions of employees don’t have access to a workplace savings plan or don’t participate if they do. Nearly 50% of people don’t have any money saved in a retirement account, according to Federal Reserve data from 2022. “It is structurally flawed,” Teresa Ghilarducci, a labor economist and professor at The New School for Social Research, said of the 401(k) system. However, this year has brought some changes to employer-sponsored plans. A new law, known as Secure Act 2.0, allows companies to now offer their employees access to lifetime annuity products in their 401(k)s. Enter financial companies offering new investments that echo the promise of a traditional pension: a paycheck you can count on for life. In April, BlackRock unveiled a new fund offering called LifePath Paycheck, which is a target-date retirement fund, which invests in less risky assets the closer you get to retirement. The new twist: It comes with an option to purchase annuities recommended by BlackRock. People who are in BlackRock’s target date fund and elect to purchase an annuity through their workplace plan are not subject to the typical sales commission fees usually associated with buying an annuity. But they can only be in the fund if they have a managed account within their 401(k) plan and pay a management fee based on their assets. Nationwide is also offering a new target-date fund with an annuity option for 401(k) participants called Income America 5ForLife, although it’s structured differently from BlackRock’s product. By being in the fund you automatically will get annuity payments in retirement and those payments will be based on 5% of your balance when you retire. The product promises to continue paying that amount, even if you outlive the account’s balance. Unlike a traditional annuity, you can pull your money out of the plan without penalty if you no longer wish to receive annuity payments. “This is a whole new burgeoning segment,” Eric Stevenson, Nationwide’s president of retirement solutions, told CNN. “This isn’t your father’s annuity.” Both products can be used with tax-deferred 401k savings or after-tax Roth 401(k) savings. For now, they are only available to employees at companies that offer them and only if they have managed accounts within the workplace savings plan. Ghilarducci cautioned that these products won’t be free. And she advised that, when possible, retirees should opt to manage their savings on their own. “Then you’re not subject to any fees and you’re not paying somebody else’s profits,” she said. But for retirees looking for a guarantee that they won’t run out of money, some of these new offerings may be appealing. There may be other downsides, however: As with other annuities, the monthly paychecks you get may be smaller if you elect to pass the benefit on to your spouse after you pass away, and annuities generally don’t allow payments to pass on to children without incurring an additional cost. And annuities can be confusing to navigate — and with many it is difficult to remove your money after you’re locked in. There’s also the issue of inflation. Annuities do not necessarily offer inflation-adjusted payments, which means the value of your guaranteed paycheck will decline over time as you get older. In other words, it’s always buyer beware. A steady paycheck, even one that emulates a traditional pension, might not be a perfect solution. Though she said she’s not worried about her finances after retiring, Messina, the administrative assistant in New Jersey, conceded that she and her husband will likely have to downsize, even with the benefits of a pension and annuity. “Even with the amount of money we’ll be getting, we can’t stay here in New Jersey,” she said. Their next hurdle is deciding where to settle before they retire. Messina wants to relocate to South Carolina, while her husband wants to move to North Dakota.",CNN,18/05/2024,"['More Americans are turning 65 this year than ever before, and that number is set to creep even higher over the next few years.', 'It’s fueling a huge rollout of new retirement products — but they’re not all golden tickets.', 'An average of 11,200 Americans will reach that traditional retirement age each day in 2024, according to a recent report by the Alliance for Lifetime Income.', 'This surge, along with new legislation that took effect recently, has led to a growing number of financial products that promise paychecks for life, no matter how long you live.', 'But some options are difficult to reverse and, since some plans are so new, the benefits and shortfalls have not been thoroughly researched.', 'Although she plans to stop working in about a decade, Jennifer Messina, a 51-year-old administrative assistant in Nutley, New Jersey, said she isn’t worried about retirement because her husband’s job affords them a union-sponsored annuity (an insurance product that pays out income) and a pension plan.', 'With defined benefit pensions, the burden of saving and investing for retirement falls on the employer, not on employees.', 'These plans generally offer employees payments for life, depending on that person’s salary and how long they were with the company.', '“I’m really fortunate,” Messina said. “', 'We didn’t really save much of anything.”', 'However, jobs offering pension plans are harder to come by compared to previous decades.', 'Over the past 40 years, defined contribution plans, also known as 401(k) plans, have taken their place.', 'Americans currently hold over $7 trillion in 401(k) plans, according to data from the Investment Company Institute, a trade association.', 'These types of retirement plans put the job of saving and investing on the employee.', 'With 401(k) plans, it’s up to retirees to ensure they don’t run out of money.', 'Many people aren’t able to save adequately for retirement so that potentially leaves them heavily reliant on the Social Security benefits they accrued in their working years – and those benefits aren’t huge.', 'The average retiree’s monthly check this year is $1,915, according to the Social Security Administration.', 'And even retirees with the highest earnings during their careers are getting somewhere between $2,710 and $4,873 depending on the age they are when they retire.', 'In addition, millions of employees don’t have access to a workplace savings plan or don’t participate if they do.', 'Nearly 50% of people don’t have any money saved in a retirement account, according to Federal Reserve data from 2022.', '“It is structurally flawed,” Teresa Ghilarducci, a labor economist and professor at The New School for Social Research, said of the 401(k) system.', 'However, this year has brought some changes to employer-sponsored plans.', 'A new law, known as Secure Act 2.0, allows companies to now offer their employees access to lifetime annuity products in their 401(k)s.', 'Enter financial companies offering new investments that echo the promise of a traditional pension: a paycheck you can count on for life.', 'In April, BlackRock unveiled a new fund offering called LifePath Paycheck, which is a target-date retirement fund, which invests in less risky assets the closer you get to retirement.', 'The new twist: It comes with an option to purchase annuities recommended by BlackRock.', 'People who are in BlackRock’s target date fund and elect to purchase an annuity through their workplace plan are not subject to the typical sales commission fees usually associated with buying an annuity.', 'But they can only be in the fund if they have a managed account within their 401(k) plan and pay a management fee based on their assets.', 'Nationwide is also offering a new target-date fund with an annuity option for 401(k) participants called Income America 5ForLife, although it’s structured differently from BlackRock’s product.', 'By being in the fund you automatically will get annuity payments in retirement and those payments will be based on 5% of your balance when you retire.', 'The product promises to continue paying that amount, even if you outlive the account’s balance.', 'Unlike a traditional annuity, you can pull your money out of the plan without penalty if you no longer wish to receive annuity payments.', '“This is a whole new burgeoning segment,” Eric Stevenson, Nationwide’s president of retirement solutions, told CNN. “', 'This isn’t your father’s annuity.”', 'Both products can be used with tax-deferred 401k savings or after-tax Roth 401(k) savings.', 'For now, they are only available to employees at companies that offer them and only if they have managed accounts within the workplace savings plan.', 'Ghilarducci cautioned that these products won’t be free.', 'And she advised that, when possible, retirees should opt to manage their savings on their own. “', 'Then you’re not subject to any fees and you’re not paying somebody else’s profits,” she said.', 'But for retirees looking for a guarantee that they won’t run out of money, some of these new offerings may be appealing.', 'There may be other downsides, however: As with other annuities, the monthly paychecks you get may be smaller if you elect to pass the benefit on to your spouse after you pass away, and annuities generally don’t allow payments to pass on to children without incurring an additional cost.', 'And annuities can be confusing to navigate — and with many it is difficult to remove your money after you’re locked in.', 'There’s also the issue of inflation.', 'Annuities do not necessarily offer inflation-adjusted payments, which means the value of your guaranteed paycheck will decline over time as you get older.', 'In other words, it’s always buyer beware.', 'A steady paycheck, even one that emulates a traditional pension, might not be a perfect solution.', 'Though she said she’s not worried about her finances after retiring, Messina, the administrative assistant in New Jersey, conceded that she and her husband will likely have to downsize, even with the benefits of a pension and annuity.', '“Even with the amount of money we’ll be getting, we can’t stay here in New Jersey,” she said.', 'Their next hurdle is deciding where to settle before they retire.', 'Messina wants to relocate to South Carolina, while her husband wants to move to North Dakota.']",0.1354248717314824,Many people aren’t able to save adequately for retirement so that potentially leaves them heavily reliant on the Social Security benefits they accrued in their working years – and those benefits aren’t huge.,"Although she plans to stop working in about a decade, Jennifer Messina, a 51-year-old administrative assistant in Nutley, New Jersey, said she isn’t worried about retirement because her husband’s job affords them a union-sponsored annuity (an insurance product that pays out income) and a pension plan.",-0.1577972684587751,"More Americans are turning 65 this year than ever before, and that number is set to creep even higher over the next few years.","However, jobs offering pension plans are harder to come by compared to previous decades.",2024-05-20 OpenAI’s wild week. How the Sam Altman story unfolded,https://edition.cnn.com/2023/11/22/tech/openai-sam-altman-chaos-explained-intl-hnk/index.html," Updated 3:32 PM EST, Wed November 22, 2023 ","In a year of wild tech stories that has seen Elon Musk transform Twitter, cryptocurrency exchange FTX collapse and Silicon Valley Bank implode, this week’s whiplash-inducing turmoil at OpenAI is among the most captivating. Sam Altman — the leader of one of the world’s most influential AI companies, OpenAI, and perhaps the most visible figure in the fledgling industry — was fired Friday night by the startup’s directors in a surprise move. Less than five days later, he’s back as the company’s CEO, now with a board that is, in theory, more supportive of his vision. The series of extraordinary events unfolded just days after OpenAI held its first-ever developer conference, where it laid out new, commercialized versions of its technology, including the option to customize its ChatGPT AI chatbot. If you’re just catching up, here’s what you missed from a week so incredible you’d be forgiven for thinking the script could have been written by an early version of OpenAI’s ChatGPT. Around 3 p.m. ET, Altman joined a Google Meet call with most of OpenAI’s board that had been convened by fellow co-founder and OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, during which Altman was fired and told that the news would soon be made public. Within the next half hour, the board also informed Greg Brockman, another co-founder and OpenAI president, that he would be removed from the board. Around 3:30 p.m. ET, OpenAI publicly announced that it had fired Altman over concerns that he was not always truthful with the board. The board said Mira Murati, the company’s chief technology officer, would become interim CEO. OpenAI’s strategic partners, including its biggest financial backer Microsoft, were also reportedly informed of Altman’s ouster just minutes before the board’s announcement. Hours after being fired, Altman posted on X that he “loved working with such talented people” and that he would have “more to say about what’s next later.” Brockman promptly quit. “Please don’t spend any time being concerned. We will be fine,” Brockman said in a Friday post on X. “Greater things coming soon.” A key factor in the CEO’s firing was tension between Altman, who favored developing AI more aggressively, and members of the OpenAI board, who wanted to move more cautiously, according to CNN contributor Kara Swisher, who spoke to sources knowledgeable about the unfolding events. Within 24 hours of Altman being fired, reports emerged that he and other ex-OpenAI loyalists were mulling plans for their own venture. OpenAI’s board was also reportedly having second thoughts and considering asking the ousted CEO to return. By Sunday afternoon, Altman was back at OpenAI’s headquarters — this time with a guest badge — to negotiate his potential return. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella reportedly mediated the discussion. A 5 p.m. PT deadline was reportedly set for the board to agree to Altman’s demands, including adding a seat for Microsoft, and reinstating him as CEO. But those talks broke down. As Sunday turned into Monday, Nadella tweeted that Altman, along with Brockman, would join Microsoft to run a new AI research group. At OpenAI, the group found a new interim CEO: Emmett Shear, the former CEO of Amazon’s streaming service, Twitch. Murati would return to her role as OpenAI’s chief technology officer. In a post on X early Monday, Shear, who left his role at Twitch in March, described the chance to join OpenAI as “a once-in-a-lifetime” opportunity. He added that the company would hire an independent investigator to report on what happened in the lead-up to Altman’s firing. But OpenAI employees were not convinced. More than 500 staffers signed an open letter calling on the company’s board to resign and reinstate Altman and Brockman. They also threatened to follow the co-founders to Microsoft if their demands were not met. Altman posted on X, saying, “we have more unity and commitment and focus than ever before. we are all going to work together some way or other, and i’m so excited. one team, one mission.” The drama was far from over. The Verge reported Monday afternoon that Altman and Brockman could still return to OpenAI if the board members who fired him resign. And Nadella, speaking to CNBC, said he was “open to both options” when asked whether Altman would actually join Microsoft. “Look, that is for the OpenAI board and management and the employees to choose,” Nadella said. “We chose to explicitly partner with OpenAI and we want to continue to do so, and obviously, that depends on the people of OpenAI staying there or coming to Microsoft.” Altman was reinstated late Tuesday as OpenAI’s CEO, the company said on X. “We have reached an agreement in principle for Sam Altman to return to OpenAI as CEO with a new initial board,” the company said, adding that the board will be chaired by Bret Taylor, a former co-CEO of Salesforce. Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers will also join the board, alongside existing director, Quora CEO Adam D’Angelo. “We are collaborating to figure out the details,” it said. In his own post on X, formerly Twitter, Altman wrote that he is “looking forward” to returning to OpenAI and building on the firm’s “strong partnership” with Microsoft. It’s unclear how Shear will be affected by Altman’s return. Posting on X, Shear wrote: “I am deeply pleased by this result, after (some) 72 very intense hours of work … I’m glad to have been a part of the solution.” Brockman is also returning to OpenAI, according to his post on X. Ultimately, Microsoft and Altman appear to be the big winners from the dust-up: Altman will continue leading the firm he helped to found. And Microsoft has wrested more control over the company it has backed with billions to bolster its ambitions in developing AI. “We are encouraged by the changes to the OpenAI board,” Nadella said on X. “We believe this is a first essential step on a path to more stable, well-informed, and effective governance.”",CNN,22/11/2023,"['In a year of wild tech stories that has seen Elon Musk transform Twitter, cryptocurrency exchange FTX collapse and Silicon Valley Bank implode, this week’s whiplash-inducing turmoil at OpenAI is among the most captivating.', 'Sam Altman — the leader of one of the world’s most influential AI companies, OpenAI, and perhaps themost visible figure in the fledgling industry — was fired Friday night by the startup’s directors in a surprise move.', 'Less than five days later, he’s back as the company’s CEO, now with a board that is, in theory, more supportive of his vision.', 'The series of extraordinary events unfolded just days after OpenAI held itsfirst-ever developer conference, where it laid out new, commercialized versions of its technology, including the option to customize its ChatGPT AI chatbot.', 'If you’re just catching up, here’s what you missed from a week so incredible you’d be forgiven for thinking the script could have been written by an early version of OpenAI’s ChatGPT.', 'Around 3 p.m. ET, Altman joined a Google Meet call with most of OpenAI’s board that had been convened by fellow co-founder and OpenAI chief scientistIlya Sutskever, during which Altman was fired and told that the news would soon be made public.', 'Within the next half hour, the board also informed Greg Brockman, another co-founder and OpenAI president, that he would be removed from the board.', 'Around 3:30 p.m. ET, OpenAI publicly announced that it had fired Altman over concerns that he was not always truthful with the board.', 'The board said Mira Murati, the company’s chief technology officer, would become interim CEO.', 'OpenAI’s strategic partners, including its biggest financial backer Microsoft, were also reportedly informed of Altman’s ouster just minutes before the board’s announcement.', 'Hours after being fired, Altman posted on X that he “loved working with such talented people” and that he would have “more to say about what’s next later.”', 'Brockman promptly quit. “', 'Please don’t spend any time being concerned.', 'We will be fine,” Brockmansaid in a Friday poston X. “Greater things coming soon.”', 'A key factor in the CEO’s firing wastension between Altman, who favored developing AImore aggressively, and members of the OpenAI board, who wanted to move more cautiously,according to CNN contributor Kara Swisher,who spoke to sources knowledgeable about the unfolding events.', 'Within 24 hours of Altman being fired, reports emerged that he and other ex-OpenAI loyalists were mulling plans for their own venture.', 'OpenAI’s board was also reportedly having second thoughts and considering asking the ousted CEO to return.', 'By Sunday afternoon, Altman wasback at OpenAI’s headquarters— this time with a guest badge — to negotiate his potential return.', 'Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella reportedly mediated the discussion.', 'A 5 p.m. PT deadline was reportedly set for the board to agree to Altman’s demands, including adding a seat for Microsoft, and reinstating him as CEO.', 'But those talks broke down.', 'As Sunday turned into Monday, Nadella tweeted that Altman, along with Brockman, would join Microsoft to run a new AI research group.', 'At OpenAI, the group found a new interim CEO: Emmett Shear, the former CEO of Amazon’s streaming service, Twitch.', 'Murati would return to her role as OpenAI’s chief technology officer.', 'In a post on X early Monday, Shear, who left his role at Twitch in March, described the chance to join OpenAI as “a once-in-a-lifetime” opportunity.', 'He added that the company would hire an independent investigator to report on what happened in the lead-up to Altman’s firing.', 'But OpenAI employees were not convinced.', 'More than 500 staffers signed an open letter calling on the company’s board to resign and reinstate Altman and Brockman.', 'They also threatened to follow the co-founders to Microsoft if their demands were not met.', 'Altman posted on X, saying, “we have more unity and commitment and focus than ever before.', 'we are all going to work together some way or other, and i’m so excited.', 'one team, one mission.”', 'The drama was far from over.', 'The Verge reported Monday afternoonthat Altman and Brockman could still return to OpenAI if the board members who fired him resign.', 'And Nadella, speaking to CNBC, said he was “open to both options” when asked whether Altman would actually join Microsoft.', '“Look, that is for the OpenAI board and management and the employees to choose,” Nadella said. “', 'We chose to explicitly partner with OpenAI and we want to continue to do so, and obviously, that depends on the people of OpenAI staying there or coming to Microsoft.”', 'Altmanwas reinstated late Tuesday as OpenAI’s CEO, the company said on X. “We have reached an agreement in principle for Sam Altman to return to OpenAI as CEO with a new initial board,” the company said, adding that the board will be chaired by Bret Taylor, a former co-CEO of Salesforce.', 'Former Treasury SecretaryLarry Summers will also join the board, alongside existing director, Quora CEOAdam D’Angelo.', '“We are collaborating to figure out the details,” it said.', 'In his own post on X, formerly Twitter, Altmanwrotethat he is “looking forward” to returning to OpenAI and building on the firm’s “strong partnership” with Microsoft.', 'It’s unclear how Shear will be affected by Altman’s return.', 'Posting on X, Shear wrote:“I am deeply pleased by this result, after (some) 72 very intense hours of work … I’m glad to have been a part of the solution.”', 'Brockman is also returning to OpenAI, according to hispost on X. Ultimately, Microsoft and Altman appear to be the big winners from the dust-up: Altman will continue leading the firm he helped to found.', 'And Microsoft has wrested more control over the company it has backed with billions to bolster its ambitions in developing AI.', '“We are encouraged by the changes to the OpenAI board,” Nadellasaidon X. “We believe this is a first essential step on a path to more stable, well-informed, and effective governance.”']",0.062777217389235,"“We are encouraged by the changes to the OpenAI board,” Nadellasaidon X. “We believe this is a first essential step on a path to more stable, well-informed, and effective governance.”","Around 3:30 p.m. ET, OpenAI publicly announced that it had fired Altman over concerns that he was not always truthful with the board.",0.549453833273479,And Microsoft has wrested more control over the company it has backed with billions to bolster its ambitions in developing AI.,"Sam Altman — the leader of one of the world’s most influential AI companies, OpenAI, and perhaps themost visible figure in the fledgling industry — was fired Friday night by the startup’s directors in a surprise move.",2024-05-20 Universities continue to grapple with pro-Palestinian protests ahead of graduation ceremonies,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/18/business/college-graduations-pro-palestinian-protests/index.html," Published 3:07 PM EDT, Sat May 18, 2024 ","Universities across the United States have adopted a number of tactics in recent weeks to prevent disruptions by pro-Palestinian protesters at graduation ceremonies. Some universities have reached agreements with on-campus demonstrators, while others have cited safety concerns and canceled, postponed or relocated their schoolwide ceremonies. Several schools continue to grapple with pro-Palestinian protesters ahead of their spring commencement, subjecting themselves to internal scrutiny and public criticism. On Friday night, University of Pennsylvania police arrested 19 individuals, including seven students, following an attempt by pro-Palestinian demonstrators to occupy a university building, a university spokesperson told CNN Saturday. Penn Against the Occupation announced their intention to occupy Fisher-Bennet Hall in a post on the group’s Instagram Friday night, calling for people to “flood UPenn for Palestine.” The group called on the school’s administration, in part, to divest from corporations “that profit from Israel’s war on Gaza and occupation in Palestine and academically from Israel institutions, condemning the scholasticide of Palestinian scholars and universities,” according to another Instagram post. Friday’s arrests follow the arrest of at least 33 people on May 10 when law enforcement broke down a pro-Palestinian encampment erected on campus. The latest campus arrests also come just a few days before Monday’s universitywide commencement ceremony, where students and their families will be subject to additional safety procedures described as “airport-style security screening,” the university said in a safety update earlier this month. Guests and graduates will not be allowed to bring signs, posters, flags and artificial noisemakers, according to school officials. On Thursday, the Academic Senate at the University of California, Los Angeles rejected resolutions of no confidence and censure brought against Gene Block, the school’s chancellor. The resolutions were brought forward in the wake of an attack by counterprotesters on an on-campus pro-Palestinian encampment on April 30, and claimed Block “failed to ensure the safety of our students and grievously mishandled” the situation. The no-confidence resolution failed after only 43% of members voted in its favor. The resolution to censure failed to get the majority of votes required to pass by the senate. In all, 88 members voted in favor of the censure, while 88 opposed it, three abstained and 15 were present but didn’t vote. “It is clear that we are not united in how we view the major events of the past weeks and the campus response to them,” Chair Andrea M. Kasko said Friday in a statement. “I hope that we can try to find common ground as colleagues, and have the courage to listen with open minds and open hearts even when we do not agree.” Also Friday, Mildred García, the chancellor of the California State University System, announced Sonoma State University President Mike Lee would be stepping down after he sent a message “concerning an agreement with campus protesters … sent without the appropriate approvals.” The statement sent by Lee to the Sonoma State campus community on Tuesday included agreements to set up an advisory council of Students for Justice in Palestine as well as a review of the university’s vendor contracts and investments, according to a copy of the message obtained by CNN. “SSU will not pursue or engage in any study abroad programs, faculty exchanges, or other formal collaborations that are sponsored by, or represent, the Israeli state academic and research institutions,” Lee wrote, adding study abroad programs in Israel will be “terminated until further notice.” On Wednesday, García announced Lee had been placed on administrative leave for “insubordination.” In Atlanta, Morehouse College President David A. Thomas said he would shut down Sunday’s commencement ceremonies “on the spot” rather than allow police to remove student protesters during President Joe Biden’s highly anticipated graduation speech. “What we won’t allow is disruptive behavior that prevents the ceremony or services from proceeding in a manner that those in attendance can partake and enjoy,” Thomas told CNN’s Victor Blackwell in an interview Thursday. “So, for example, prolonged shouting down of the president as he speaks. I have also made a decision that we will also not ask police to take individuals out of commencement in zip ties. If faced with the choice, I will cease the ceremonies on the spot If we were to reach that position.” Biden’s presence at Morehouse, one of the nation’s preeminent historically Black colleges, comes as the president campaigns amid weak polling among young voters, even as many have expressed frustration with his administration’s continued support of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza. Biden has been confronted by some protests during his own speeches and campaign events. On January 23, his campaign speech on abortion rights at George Mason University in Virginia was interrupted more than a dozen times over his administration’s support of Israel. Biden is expected to deliver a commencement address at the United States Military Academy at West Point on May 25.",CNN,18/05/2024,"['Universities across the United States have adopted a number of tactics in recent weeks to prevent disruptions by pro-Palestinian protesters at graduation ceremonies.', 'Some universities have reached agreements with on-campus demonstrators, while others have cited safety concerns and canceled, postponed or relocated their schoolwide ceremonies.', 'Several schools continue to grapple with pro-Palestinian protesters ahead of their spring commencement, subjecting themselves to internal scrutiny and public criticism.', 'On Friday night, University of Pennsylvania police arrested 19 individuals, including seven students, following an attempt by pro-Palestinian demonstrators to occupy a university building, auniversity spokesperson told CNN Saturday.', 'Penn Against the Occupation announced their intention to occupy Fisher-Bennet Hall ina post on the group’s InstagramFriday night, calling for people to “flood UPenn for Palestine.”', 'The group called on the school’s administration, in part, to divest from corporations “that profit from Israel’s war on Gaza and occupation in Palestine and academically from Israel institutions, condemning the scholasticide of Palestinian scholars and universities,” according to another Instagram post.', 'Friday’s arrests followthe arrest of at least 33 peopleon May 10 when law enforcement broke down a pro-Palestinian encampment erected on campus.', 'The latest campus arrests also come just a few days before Monday’s universitywide commencement ceremony, where students and their families will be subject to additional safety proceduresdescribed as“airport-style security screening,” the university said in a safety update earlier this month.', 'Guests and graduateswill not be allowedto bring signs, posters, flags and artificial noisemakers, according to school officials.', 'On Thursday, the Academic Senate at the University of California, Los Angeles rejected resolutions of no confidence and censure brought against Gene Block, the school’s chancellor.', 'The resolutions were brought forward in thewake of an attack by counterprotesterson an on-campus pro-Palestinian encampment on April 30, and claimed Block “failed to ensure the safety of our students and grievously mishandled” the situation.', 'The no-confidence resolution failed after only 43% of members voted in its favor.', 'The resolution to censure failed to get the majority of votes required to pass by the senate.', 'In all, 88 members voted in favor of the censure, while 88 opposed it, three abstained and 15 were present but didn’t vote.', '“It is clear that we are not united in how we view the major events of the past weeks and the campus response to them,” Chair Andrea M. Kasko said Friday in a statement. “', 'I hope that we can try to find common ground as colleagues, and have the courage to listen with open minds and open hearts even when we do not agree.”', 'Also Friday, Mildred García, the chancellor of the California State University System, announced Sonoma State University President Mike Lee would be stepping down after he sent a message “concerning an agreement with campus protesters … sent without the appropriate approvals.”', 'The statement sent by Lee to the Sonoma State campus community on Tuesday included agreements to set up an advisory council of Students for Justice in Palestine as well as a review of the university’s vendor contracts and investments, according to a copy of the message obtained by CNN.', '“SSU will not pursue or engage in any study abroad programs, faculty exchanges, or other formal collaborations that are sponsored by, or represent, the Israeli state academic and research institutions,” Lee wrote, adding study abroad programs in Israel will be “terminated until further notice.”', 'On Wednesday, García announced Lee had been placed on administrative leave for “insubordination.”', 'In Atlanta, Morehouse College President David A. Thomas said he would shut down Sunday’s commencement ceremonies “on the spot” rather than allow police to remove student protesters during President Joe Biden’s highly anticipated graduation speech.', '“What we won’t allow is disruptive behavior that prevents the ceremony or services from proceeding in a manner that those in attendance can partake and enjoy,” Thomas told CNN’s Victor Blackwell in an interview Thursday.', '“So, for example, prolonged shouting down of the president as he speaks.', 'I have also made a decision that we will also not ask police to take individuals out of commencement in zip ties.', 'If faced with the choice, I will cease the ceremonies on the spot If we were to reach that position.”', 'Biden’s presence at Morehouse, one of the nation’s preeminent historically Black colleges, comes as the president campaigns amid weak polling among young voters, even as many have expressed frustration with his administration’s continued support of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.', 'Biden has beenconfronted by some protestsduring his own speeches and campaign events.', 'On January 23, his campaign speech on abortion rights at George Mason University in Virginia was interruptedmore than a dozentimes over his administration’s support of Israel.', 'Biden is expected to deliver a commencement address at the United States Military Academy at West Point on May 25.']",-0.0088624052649684,"The statement sent by Lee to the Sonoma State campus community on Tuesday included agreements to set up an advisory council of Students for Justice in Palestine as well as a review of the university’s vendor contracts and investments, according to a copy of the message obtained by CNN.",Friday’s arrests followthe arrest of at least 33 peopleon May 10 when law enforcement broke down a pro-Palestinian encampment erected on campus.,-0.6151451894215175,"Some universities have reached agreements with on-campus demonstrators, while others have cited safety concerns and canceled, postponed or relocated their schoolwide ceremonies.","Biden’s presence at Morehouse, one of the nation’s preeminent historically Black colleges, comes as the president campaigns amid weak polling among young voters, even as many have expressed frustration with his administration’s continued support of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.",2024-05-20 Senate Banking Committee Chair calls for ‘new leadership’ at the FDIC following scathing report,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/economy/fdic-chair-gruenberg-senate-banking-committee/index.html," Updated 12:37 PM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","Sen. Sherrod Brown, a Democrat who heads the Senate Banking Committee, is calling for a leadership overhaul at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation following a scathing 234-page report released earlier this month that detailed pervasive sexual harassment, discrimination and bullying at the agency. Brown stopped short of explicitly calling for FDIC Chair Martin Gruenberg, who was appointed by President Joe Biden, to resign. Rather, he said in a statement Monday morning, “there must be fundamental changes at the FDIC.” “Those changes begin with new leadership, who must fix the agency’s toxic culture and put the women and men who work there — and their mission — first,” Brown said. “That’s why I’m calling on the President to immediately nominate a new Chair who can lead the FDIC at this challenging time and for the Senate to act on that nomination without delay.” Brown’s comments come after he chaired a hearing in which Gruenberg testified last week and received “further outreach from FDIC employees.” Most Democrats haven’t called on Gruenberg to be replaced. That’s likely because if Gruenberg were to vacate his position, Vice Chair Travis Hill, a Republican appointee, would automatically become chair until a replacement is appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate. Ultimately, if President Joe Biden heeds Brown’s call, there’s no guarantee that his new pick would be confirmed by January, when a new president could be inaugurated. The White House did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for a comment. Additionally, if Gruenberg is ousted, the agency would be deadlocked with one other Republican and two Democratic members on the FDIC’s board of directors until a new chair is confirmed. That would likely stop significant and controversial banking regulations, such as ramped-up capital requirements, from taking effect. The FDIC is responsible for ensuring the safety and soundness of banks across the country. It is financed by banks that contribute to its deposit insurance fund. Jaret Seiberg, an analyst at TD Cowen, said it’s significant that Brown didn’t outright call for Gruenberg to resign. “This suggests to us that he would remain until a replacement is confirmed. That should ensure a Democratic majority that could adopt new rules,” he said in a note on Monday. Brown himself is also in a sticky position as he faces one of the toughest reelection bids in his state of Ohio that could determine which party controls the Senate. That’s partly why Seiberg believes Brown is attempting to appear as though he does not support Gruenberg “but he is not disrupting efforts to finalize bank safety and soundness rules.” Shortly after Brown released his statement, Sheila Bair, who served as chair of the FDIC from 2006 to 2011, called on Gruenberg to resign. “I have known and worked with Chairman Gruenberg for years. But there is a desperate need for change at the FDIC,” Bair, a Republican appointee, said in a post on X. “For his own sake and everyone at the FDIC, he should announce his intention to resign effective with the appointment and confirmation of a new Chair.” Gruenberg was grilled by lawmakers last week in back-to-back hearings before the House and the Senate that were scheduled prior to the report’s release. During the hearings, where Gruenberg testified alongside other top financial regulators, he told lawmakers he takes “full responsibility” for the findings of the report. “I also acknowledge my own failures as Chairman, both in failing to recognize how my temperament in meetings impacted others and for not having identified deeper cultural issues at the FDIC sooner,” he said. Gruenberg did not immediately respond a request for comment, while the FDIC declined to comment. Gruenberg also agreed to take anger management courses given the report undertaken by the law firm Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton and commissioned by the FDIC documented several instances where he lashed out at subordinates “particularly when being delivered bad news or conveyed views with which he disagrees.” That has caused staffers to delay delivering news they fear would upset him. Gruenberg’s temperament “may hinder his ability to establish trust and confidence in leading meaningful culture change,” the report added. The report, however, did not find that Gruenberg alone was responsible for the issues described in depth, based on interviews with over 500 employees. But the report said, “We do recognize that, as a number of FDIC employees put it in talking about Chairman Gruenberg, culture ‘starts at the top.’” This story has been updated with additional details and context.",CNN,20/05/2024,"['Sen. Sherrod Brown, a Democrat who heads the Senate Banking Committee, is calling for a leadership overhaul at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation following a scathing 234-page reportreleased earlier this month that detailed pervasive sexual harassment, discrimination and bullying at the agency.', 'Brown stopped short of explicitly calling for FDIC Chair Martin Gruenberg, who was appointed by President Joe Biden, to resign.', 'Rather, he said in a statement Monday morning, “there must be fundamental changes at the FDIC.”', '“Those changes begin with new leadership, who must fix the agency’s toxic culture and put the women and men who work there —and their mission — first,” Brown said. “', 'That’s why I’m calling on the President to immediately nominate a new Chair who can lead the FDIC at this challenging time and for the Senate to act on that nomination without delay.”', 'Brown’s comments come after he chaired a hearing in which Gruenberg testified last week and received “further outreach from FDIC employees.”', 'Most Democrats haven’t called on Gruenberg to be replaced.', 'That’s likely because if Gruenberg were to vacate his position, Vice Chair Travis Hill, a Republican appointee, would automatically become chair until a replacement is appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate.', 'Ultimately, if President Joe Biden heeds Brown’s call, there’s no guarantee that his new pick would be confirmed by January, when a new president could be inaugurated.', 'The White House did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for a comment.', 'Additionally, if Gruenberg is ousted, the agency would be deadlocked with one other Republican and two Democratic members on the FDIC’s board of directors until a new chair is confirmed.', 'That would likely stop significant and controversial banking regulations, such as ramped-up capital requirements, from taking effect.', 'The FDIC is responsible for ensuring the safety and soundness of banks across the country.', 'It is financed by banks that contribute to its deposit insurance fund.', 'Jaret Seiberg, an analyst at TD Cowen, said it’s significant that Brown didn’t outright call for Gruenberg to resign. “', 'This suggests to us that he would remain until a replacement is confirmed.', 'That should ensure a Democratic majority that could adopt new rules,” he said in a note on Monday.', 'Brown himself is also in a sticky position as he faces one of the toughest reelection bids in his state of Ohio that could determine which party controls the Senate.', 'That’s partly why Seiberg believes Brown is attempting to appear as though he does not support Gruenberg “but he is not disrupting efforts to finalize bank safety and soundness rules.”', 'Shortly after Brown released his statement, Sheila Bair, who served as chair of the FDIC from 2006 to 2011, called on Gruenberg to resign.', '“I have known and worked with Chairman Gruenberg for years.', 'But there is a desperate need for change at the FDIC,” Bair, a Republican appointee, said in a post on X. “For his own sake and everyone at the FDIC, he should announce his intention to resign effective with the appointment and confirmation of a new Chair.”', 'Gruenberg was grilled by lawmakers last week in back-to-back hearings before the House and the Senate that were scheduled prior to the report’s release.', 'During the hearings, where Gruenberg testified alongside other top financial regulators, he told lawmakers he takes “full responsibility” for the findings of the report.', '“I also acknowledge my own failures as Chairman, both in failing to recognize how my temperament in meetings impacted others and for not having identified deeper cultural issues at the FDIC sooner,” he said.', 'Gruenberg did not immediately respond a request for comment, while the FDIC declined to comment.', 'Gruenberg also agreed to take anger management courses given the report undertaken by the law firm Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton and commissioned by the FDIC documented several instances where he lashed out at subordinates “particularly when being delivered bad news or conveyed views with which he disagrees.”', 'That has caused staffers to delay delivering news they fear would upset him.', 'Gruenberg’s temperament “may hinder his ability to establish trust and confidence in leading meaningful culture change,” the report added.', 'The report, however, did not find that Gruenberg alone was responsible for the issues described in depth, based on interviews with over 500 employees.', 'But the report said, “We do recognize that, as a number of FDIC employees put it in talking about Chairman Gruenberg, culture ‘starts at the top.’”', 'This story has been updated with additional details and context.']",-0.0151729911769702,"Gruenberg’s temperament “may hinder his ability to establish trust and confidence in leading meaningful culture change,” the report added.","Sen. Sherrod Brown, a Democrat who heads the Senate Banking Committee, is calling for a leadership overhaul at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation following a scathing 234-page reportreleased earlier this month that detailed pervasive sexual harassment, discrimination and bullying at the agency.",-0.3457113078662327,Brown’s comments come after he chaired a hearing in which Gruenberg testified last week and received “further outreach from FDIC employees.”,"Gruenberg’s temperament “may hinder his ability to establish trust and confidence in leading meaningful culture change,” the report added.",2024-05-20 Top soccer clubs are using an AI-powered app to scout future stars,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/01/tech/aiscout-app-soccer-scouting-spc-intl/index.html," Published 7:14 AM EST, Fri March 1, 2024 ","A London-based technology company is looking to “democratize” talent-identification and scouting in soccer using a mobile app. Free to download and available globally, the aiScout app allows aspiring soccer stars to enter virtual trials for professional clubs by uploading self-recorded footage of themselves completing a series of drills. It offers 75 exercises, designed to test a range of skills, with videos showing users how to complete them. Performances are automatically scored by artificial intelligence (AI) technology. The data can then be accessed by clubs, allowing their scouts to peruse scores for viable talent, honing their search with a variety of filters; from age and gender to position on the pitch. The app currently has two English Premier League (EPL) partners, Chelsea and Burnley, and clubs can tailor their in-app trials to meet specific needs and set their own benchmarks by having their academy players complete the same drills. “We’re putting that data up front to make better use of [the scouts’] time,” said Richard Felton-Thomas, chief operating officer of ai.io, the company behind the app. “To say [to scouts], ‘Go over to this place today because there’s three players in that game that are all actually beating your Chelsea standard’ — that’s going to be the best use of your time.’” It already appears to be working for some. Ben Greenwood had never had a trial with a professional club until he downloaded the app in 2019. After uploading footage of himself, the 17-year-old landed a trial with Chelsea, becoming the first user of the app to get a trial with a pro club. He signed a contract with EPL team Bournemouth in 2021. Having beta-tested in with players spanning 125 countries, Greenwood among them, 135 players have been trialed or signed by pro clubs or national teams through the app — which fully launched in September 2023 — according to Felton-Thomas. Just over 100,000 players make up the current database, but with over 100 clubs lined up to join Chelsea and Burnley, as well as a multi-year partnership with Major League Soccer in the US announced last May, Felton-Thomas projects user numbers to surge into the millions as the operation ramps up this year. Felton-Thomas said the “lion’s share” of its income comes from charging clubs a license fee to run the platform. Annual fees vary depending on the size of the club and the tools they require, ranging from six figures for “tier one” sides like Chelsea, to thousands of pounds for clubs lower down the footballing pyramid. The use of smart technology in sport continues to expand, including AI commentary tools and wearable tech for elite athletes. The global market for sports analytics, valued at $2.7 billion in 2023, is projected to grow 22% by the end of the decade, according to market research firm Grand View Research. Should soccer talent scouts be concerned about being edged out by the arrival of AI in their industry? For Felton-Thomas, new technologies can co-exist with traditional methods. “It’s more about evolution than revolution,” Felton-Thomas explained. “We can’t tell you when that player’s actually in that match, how does he deal with adversity? What happens when he’s 2-0 down? What happens when someone’s shouting at him? What happens when he’s just made a massive mistake?” “We’ve got the ability to just augment real people to do their jobs better and faster, which then gives an opportunity to the player through the AI, but you’re still actually just connecting them to the human on the other side, which is the club and the scout.” While football remains ai.io’s primary focus, the company is looking into opportunities in other sports to launch in the coming years. Further ahead, it may branch out beyond sports. “You think about the notion that you can be at home and analyze your movements, and how this could spin into health care, physical assessments for military disciplines and emergency services,” Felton-Thomas told CNN.",CNN,01/03/2024,"['A London-based technology company is looking to “democratize” talent-identification and scouting in soccer using a mobile app.', 'Free to download and available globally, the aiScout app allows aspiring soccer stars to enter virtual trials for professional clubs by uploading self-recorded footage of themselves completing a series of drills.', 'It offers 75 exercises, designed to test a range of skills, with videos showing users how to complete them.', 'Performances are automatically scored by artificial intelligence (AI) technology.', 'The data can then be accessed by clubs, allowing their scouts to peruse scores for viable talent, honing their search with a variety of filters; from age and gender to position on the pitch.', 'The app currently has two English Premier League (EPL) partners, Chelsea and Burnley, and clubs can tailor their in-app trials to meet specific needs and set their own benchmarks by having their academy players complete the same drills.', '“We’re putting that data up front to make better use of [the scouts’] time,” said Richard Felton-Thomas, chief operating officer of ai.io, the company behind the app.', '“To say [to scouts], ‘Go over to this place today because there’s three players in that game that are all actually beating your Chelsea standard’ — that’s going to be the best use of your time.’”', 'It already appears to be working for some.', 'Ben Greenwood had never had a trial with a professional club until he downloaded the app in 2019.', 'After uploading footage of himself, the 17-year-old landed a trial with Chelsea, becoming the first user of the app to get a trial with a pro club.', 'He signed a contractwith EPL team Bournemouthin 2021.', 'Having beta-tested in with players spanning 125 countries, Greenwood among them, 135 players have been trialed or signed by pro clubs or national teams through the app — which fully launched in September 2023 — according to Felton-Thomas.', 'Just over 100,000 players make up the current database, but with over 100 clubs lined up to join Chelsea and Burnley, as well as a multi-year partnership with Major League Soccer in the US announced last May, Felton-Thomas projects user numbers to surge into the millions as the operation ramps up this year.', 'Felton-Thomas said the “lion’s share” of its income comes from charging clubs a license fee to run the platform.', 'Annual fees vary depending on the size of the club and the tools they require, ranging from six figures for “tier one” sides like Chelsea, to thousands of pounds for clubs lower down the footballing pyramid.', 'The use of smart technology in sport continues to expand, includingAI commentary tools and wearable tech for elite athletes.', 'The global market for sports analytics, valued at$2.7 billionin 2023, is projected to grow 22% by the end of the decade, according to market research firm Grand View Research.', 'Should soccer talent scouts be concerned about being edged out by the arrival of AI in their industry?', 'For Felton-Thomas, new technologies can co-exist with traditional methods.', '“It’s more about evolution than revolution,” Felton-Thomas explained.', '“We can’t tell you when that player’s actually in that match, how does he deal with adversity?', 'What happens when he’s 2-0 down?', 'What happens when someone’s shouting at him?', 'What happens when he’s just made a massive mistake?”', '“We’ve got the ability to just augment real people to do their jobs better and faster, which then gives an opportunity to the player through the AI, but you’re still actually just connecting them to the human on the other side, which is the club and the scout.”', 'While football remains ai.io’s primary focus, the company is looking into opportunities in other sports to launch in the coming years.', 'Further ahead, it may branch out beyond sports.', '“You think about the notion that you can be at home and analyze your movements, and how this could spin into health care, physical assessments for military disciplines and emergency services,” Felton-Thomas told CNN.']",0.2022322827681825,"The global market for sports analytics, valued at$2.7 billionin 2023, is projected to grow 22% by the end of the decade, according to market research firm Grand View Research.","“We can’t tell you when that player’s actually in that match, how does he deal with adversity?",0.6922526359558105,"The global market for sports analytics, valued at$2.7 billionin 2023, is projected to grow 22% by the end of the decade, according to market research firm Grand View Research.",Should soccer talent scouts be concerned about being edged out by the arrival of AI in their industry?,2024-05-20 Disneyland character performers vote to unionize,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/19/business/disney-character-performers-vote-union/index.html," Published 4:02 PM EDT, Sun May 19, 2024 ","You can add Mickey, Minnie, Donald and Goofy to the growing list of workers seeking better employment benefits. After three days of voting last week, 1,700 Disneyland Resort cast members who play characters around the theme park in Anaheim, California, as well as perform at parades, voted to unionize under Actors’ Equity Association, the union announced Saturday night. Equity described the vote as “a landslide victory,” with 953 cast members favoring unionization and 258 opposed. The group had announced a union organizing effort in February before filing for a vote with the National Labor Relations Board in April. There are more than 21,000 Disneyland “cast member” employees, who are represented by more than a dozen unions. Those unionized jobs include workers in retail, food service, security, pyrotechnic, and hair and makeup. Until now, employees dressing up as iconic Disney characters like Mickey Mouse, Cinderella, Snow White and Captain Hook have been excluded. “These workers are on the front lines of the Guest experience; they’re the human beings who create lifelong memories when your kids hug a character, or when your family watches a parade roll by the castle,” said Actors’ Equity Association President Kate Shindle in a statement. “The next step will be to collaborate with them about improving health & safety, wages, benefits, working conditions and job security.” The labor relations board is expected to certify the results next week, after which contract negotiations with The Walt Disney Company will begin. Equity said it does not know how long the bargaining process will take, adding Disney has been “relatively cooperative throughout this process.” “We have a long, positive relationship with The Walt Disney Company, both at Walt Disney World and at Disney Theatricals, and we look forward to establishing a similarly productive relationship with the Disneyland Resort,” an Equity spokesperson told CNN. A Disneyland Resort spokesperson told CNN it is too soon for the company to comment on the unionization vote because the election has yet to be certified. “Whatever the outcome, we respect that our cast members had the opportunity to have their voices heard,” the spokesperson said. On the other side of the country, Disney World character actors have been represented by Teamsters since the 1980s. More than 400 actors, stunt performers and singers unionized under Equity in 1990 at the theme park in Orlando, Florida. Today, Equity estimates they represent around 800 cast members at Disney World.",CNN,19/05/2024,"['You can add Mickey, Minnie, Donald and Goofy to the growing list of workers seeking better employment benefits.', 'After three days of voting last week, 1,700 Disneyland Resort cast members who play characters around the theme park in Anaheim, California, as well as perform at parades, voted to unionize under Actors’ Equity Association, the union announced Saturday night.', 'Equity described the vote as “a landslide victory,” with 953 cast members favoring unionization and 258 opposed.', 'The group had announced a union organizing effort in February before filing for a vote with the National Labor Relations Board in April.', 'There are more than 21,000 Disneyland “cast member” employees, who are represented by more than a dozen unions.', 'Those unionized jobs include workers in retail, food service, security, pyrotechnic, and hair and makeup.', 'Until now, employees dressing up as iconic Disney characters like Mickey Mouse, Cinderella, Snow White and Captain Hook have been excluded.', '“These workers are on the front lines of the Guest experience; they’re the human beings who create lifelong memories when your kids hug a character, or when your family watches a parade roll by the castle,” said Actors’ Equity Association President Kate Shindle in a statement. “', 'The next step will be to collaborate with them about improving health & safety, wages, benefits, working conditions and job security.”', 'The labor relations board is expected to certify the results next week, after which contract negotiations with The Walt Disney Company will begin.', 'Equity said it does not know how long the bargaining process will take, adding Disney has been “relatively cooperative throughout this process.”', '“We have a long, positive relationship with The Walt Disney Company, both at Walt Disney World and at Disney Theatricals, and we look forward to establishing a similarly productive relationship with the Disneyland Resort,” an Equity spokesperson told CNN.', 'A Disneyland Resort spokesperson told CNN it is too soon for the company to comment on the unionization vote because the election has yet to be certified. “', 'Whatever the outcome, we respect that our cast members had the opportunity to have their voices heard,” the spokesperson said.', 'On the other side of the country, Disney World character actors have been represented by Teamsters since the 1980s.', 'More than 400 actors, stunt performers and singers unionized under Equity in 1990 at the theme park in Orlando, Florida.', 'Today, Equity estimates they represent around 800 cast members at Disney World.']",0.2841792646015633,"The next step will be to collaborate with them about improving health & safety, wages, benefits, working conditions and job security.”",,0.9347304344177246,"“We have a long, positive relationship with The Walt Disney Company, both at Walt Disney World and at Disney Theatricals, and we look forward to establishing a similarly productive relationship with the Disneyland Resort,” an Equity spokesperson told CNN.",,2024-05-20 Netflix to stream Christmas Day NFL games for three years,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/15/netflix-to-stream-holiday-nfl-games-for-three-years.html,2024-05-15T20:54:37+0000,"In this articleNetflix will stream Christmas Day National Football League games for the next three years, in its first true step into live sports.The streaming platform will show two games on Christmas Day this year, followed by at least one matchup in both 2025 and 2026, the league announced Wednesday. The games will continue to be available on broadcast TV in local team markets and on the NFL+ mobile app.Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but people familiar with the matter said Netflix will pay in the ballpark of $75 million per game. Spokespeople for the NFL and Netflix declined to comment. The streamer will hire its own announcers for the games and partner with existing production companies. Sarandos told CNBC he felt the NFL was the right fit because it matched the streamer's event strategy, allowing Netflix to effectively own the day.Netflix has drawn large audiences with sports programming, from the ""Formula 1: Drive to Survive"" documentary to its ""Quarterback"" series following NFL signal callers. While the company took major strides into live programming with a deal to stream the WWE's ""Raw"" and a boxing fight between Mike Tyson and Jake Paul, the company suggested it had not found a live sports rights strategy that worked for it.""We have not seen a profit path to renting big sports,"" Sarandos said in December 2022.""We're not anti-sports, we're just pro-profit,"" Sarandos said.Now, Netflix will stream games for the most-watched U.S. sports league, at a time when it is trying to boost profits by raising subscription prices, pushing users toward an ad-tier membership and cracking down on password sharing.The games could give Netflix a major draw for advertisers. The three Christmas Day NFL games averaged 28.68 million viewers last year, according to Sports Media Watch.The Christmas Day matchups can function as a marketing ramp up for Netflix before it starts airing ""Raw"" in January.The streaming giant's forays into live events have not come without issues. Its live reunion event for the hit reality TV show ""Love Is Blind"" in April 2023 had a technical bug that delayed the stream for more than an hour, at which point the show was no longer live.The announcement comes as streamers across the industry show increasing interest in live sports programming, particularly the NFL.In January, NBCUniversal's Peacock showed an NFL Wild Card game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Miami Dolphins, marking the first time a playoff game was broadcast exclusively on a streaming service. Amazon's Prime Video has already snatched the exclusive rights to an NFL playoff game next season.Amazon also signed a media rights deal with the NFL in 2021, where it agreed to pay about $1 billion per year to have exclusive Thursday Night Football rights for 10 years, starting with the 2023 season. The deal was the first time a streaming service carried a full package of games exclusively.Netflix could be looking to branch out into basketball, as well. CNBC reported last year that Netflix, along with Amazon, Apple, YouTube TV and Comcast's NBCUniversal/Peacock, have all had preliminary conversations with the National Basketball Association about possible interest in media rights when the league's deal with Walt Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery comes to an end after next season.Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.— CNBC's Alex Sherman and Lillian Rizzo contributed to this report",CNBC,15/05/2024,"['In this articleNetflix will stream Christmas Day National Football League games for the next three years, in its first true step into live sports.', 'The streaming platform will show two games on Christmas Day this year, followed by at least one matchup in both 2025 and 2026, the league announced Wednesday.', 'The games will continue to be available on broadcast TV in local team markets and on the NFL+ mobile app.', 'Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but people familiar with the matter said Netflix will pay in the ballpark of $75 million per game.', 'Spokespeople for the NFL and Netflix declined to comment.', 'The streamer will hire its own announcers for the games and partner with existing production companies.', ""Sarandos told CNBC he felt the NFL was the right fit because it matched the streamer's event strategy, allowing Netflix to effectively own the day."", 'Netflix has drawn large audiences with sports programming, from the ""Formula 1: Drive to Survive"" documentary to its ""Quarterback"" series following NFL signal callers.', 'While the company took major strides into live programming with a deal to stream the WWE\'s ""Raw"" and a boxing fight between Mike Tyson and Jake Paul, the company suggested it had not found a live sports rights strategy that worked for it.', '""We have not seen a profit path to renting big sports,"" Sarandos said in December 2022.""We\'re not anti-sports, we\'re just pro-profit,"" Sarandos said.', 'Now, Netflix will stream games for the most-watched U.S. sports league, at a time when it is trying to boost profits by raising subscription prices, pushing users toward an ad-tier membership and cracking down on password sharing.', 'The games could give Netflix a major draw for advertisers.', 'The three Christmas Day NFL games averaged 28.68 million viewers last year, according to Sports Media Watch.', 'The Christmas Day matchups can function as a marketing ramp up for Netflix before it starts airing ""Raw"" in January.', ""The streaming giant's forays into live events have not come without issues."", 'Its live reunion event for the hit reality TV show ""Love Is Blind"" in April 2023 had a technical bug that delayed the stream for more than an hour, at which point the show was no longer live.', ""The announcement comes as streamers across the industry show increasing interest in live sports programming, particularly the NFL.In January, NBCUniversal's Peacock showed an NFL Wild Card game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Miami Dolphins, marking the first time a playoff game was broadcast exclusively on a streaming service."", ""Amazon's Prime Video has already snatched the exclusive rights to an NFL playoff game next season."", 'Amazon also signed a media rights deal with the NFL in 2021, where it agreed to pay about $1 billion per year to have exclusive Thursday Night Football rights for 10 years, starting with the 2023 season.', 'The deal was the first time a streaming service carried a full package of games exclusively.', 'Netflix could be looking to branch out into basketball, as well.', ""CNBC reported last year that Netflix, along with Amazon, Apple, YouTube TV and Comcast's NBCUniversal/Peacock, have all had preliminary conversations with the National Basketball Association about possible interest in media rights when the league's deal with Walt Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery comes to an end after next season."", 'Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.—', ""CNBC's Alex Sherman and Lillian Rizzo contributed to this report""]",0.1514868578989201,"Now, Netflix will stream games for the most-watched U.S. sports league, at a time when it is trying to boost profits by raising subscription prices, pushing users toward an ad-tier membership and cracking down on password sharing.","While the company took major strides into live programming with a deal to stream the WWE's ""Raw"" and a boxing fight between Mike Tyson and Jake Paul, the company suggested it had not found a live sports rights strategy that worked for it.",0.5904160678386688,The games could give Netflix a major draw for advertisers.,"""We have not seen a profit path to renting big sports,"" Sarandos said in December 2022.""We're not anti-sports, we're just pro-profit,"" Sarandos said.",2024-05-20 Are consumers pulling back on spending? It depends on which CEO you ask,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/20/consumer-pullback-ceos.html,2024-05-20T17:30:25+0000,"In this articleWith higher prices and elevated interest rates stubbornly sticking around, Chipotle burrito bowls and European vacations are still on the table for many consumers. But Big Macs and kitchen remodels aren't.The most recent round of quarterly earnings reports helped to sort companies into largely two camps: McDonald's, Starbucks and Home Depot were among the consumer-centric companies that surprised investors with weaker-than-expected results, saying customers had pulled back on their spending. Others, like Sweetgreen and Delta Air Lines, bucked the trend and reported growth.The takeaway? Consumers have become more selective about how and where they spend their dollars.""Consumers continue to be even more discriminating with every dollar that they spend as they faced elevated prices in their day-to-day spending,"" McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinski said on the company's conference call in late April.For more than two years, consumers have dealt with sharply rising prices. This year, most companies expect that their pricing strategies will return to their pre-pandemic approaches, thanks to stabilizing commodity prices. But that doesn't mean the actual prices seen on grocery store shelves or restaurant menus will fall, and shoppers are feeling that pinch.The consumer price index rose 3.4% over the last 12 months through April, according to Department of Labor data. On Tuesday, a day before the monthly CPI report, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell reiterated that inflation is falling more slowly than expected, which likely means the central bank won't be cutting interest rates anytime soon.Making matters worse, many consumers have run through the savings they accumulated during the pandemic when they were collecting stimulus checks in place of traveling. Instead, many are paying their everyday bills with credit cards as they face higher costs for gas, rent and groceries. The average consumer owes $6,218 on their credit cards, up 8.5% year over year, according to a TransUnion quarterly report out last week.Aurelia Concepcion, 57, a case manager in New York, said she is planning only essential travel this year, drawing the line at visiting family in Georgia and Ohio.""Everything is too high ... taxis, rent."" Concepcion says she avoids restaurants: ""It's too expensive. I'd rather prepare my own food.""Concepcion isn't the only consumer changing spending habits. Executives have been warning about a more cautious spending environment for awhile. But it's finally starting to show up in some companies' quarterly results.KFC, Pizza Hut and Starbucks were among the restaurant companies that reported declining same-store sales in the most recent quarter. Home Depot's revenue was weaker than expected because potential customers are putting off renovations until interest rates fall, executives said. And Apple iPhone sales fell 10% in the tech company's latest quarter, suggesting consumers weren't upgrading to the latest version of the smartphone in the patterns that they have in the past.""Some of the things that have seen the biggest run-up in prices over the last few years are items that confront people on a daily basis: the cost of eating out, the cost of groceries and the costs of fuel and gasoline and rents,"" said Columbia Business School economics professor Brett House. ""Regardless of whether inflation is slowing amongst those goods, even with lower inflation, prices remain very high, and people get a daily reminder of that.""Big-box giant Walmart said last Thursday that shoppers are prioritizing buying food and health-related items over general merchandise, like home goods and electronics. The retailer has reported that trend for several quarters now. Finance chief John David Rainey told CNBC that Walmart's grocery business has gotten a boost from the widening gap between restaurant prices and the cost of cooking at home. Lower-income consumers are struggling more than other demographics. They couldn't save as much during the pandemic, and evidence suggests that they've exhausted those savings, according to House. On top of that, rent prices have surged, and low-income consumers are more likely to rent than own.PepsiCo, for one, particularly called out a weaker low-income consumer. The Gatorade owner saw volume for its North American beverage business fall 5% in the quarter.""The lower-income consumer in the U.S. is stretched ... [and] is strategizing a lot to make their budgets get to the end of the month,"" CEO Ramon Laguarta told analysts on the company's conference call in April.Pepsi is leaning into promotions and discounts to lure back the low-income shopper. Other companies are similarly hoping deals will attract more customers. McDonald's, king of the low-price fas-food segment, plans to start offering a $5 value meal on June 25.While some CEOs have said that consumers are growing more cautious, others — like those in the airline industry — have celebrated strong and persistent spending.""Consumers continue to prioritize travel as a discretionary investment in themselves,"" Ed Bastian, CEO of Delta Air Lines, the most profitable U.S. carrier, said in an interview in April.Delta and its rival United last month each forecast earnings ahead of analysts' estimates for the second quarter. Both carriers offer sprawling global networks and have benefited from a rebound in international travel in the wake of the pandemic, particularly to Europe and popular destinations in Asia for U.S. travelers like Japan. Both carriers have predicted record summer travel demand.Those airline trends align with a broader consumer shift that started after pandemic lockdowns: spending more money on experiences rather than apparel or electronics.""We're still spending disproportionately on activities and services rather than on goods,"" House said.Delta and United are also capitalizing on travelers who have been willing to pay up for more expensive seats, like first class or premium economy. U.S. airlines have been racing to add more high-priced seating to their planes and grow lounges for top spenders. Inflation hasn't hurt high-income consumers as much as it has the budget-conscious, giving them more room to spend.Higher-income consumers have also bolstered fast-casual restaurant chains, like Chipotle, that come in at a slightly higher price point than the cheapest options. The burrito chain's same-store sales grew 7% during the first quarter, fueled by a 5.4% increase in foot traffic. Chipotle has a strong perception of value among diners, CEO Brian Niccol said on the company's conference call. Executives have also previously emphasized that most of its customers come from higher-income brackets.Even Walmart have been attracting consumers with deeper pockets. As customers pay more for groceries, the discounter has attracted more affluent customers and stolen market share from rivals like Target, which has historically been more popular with wealthier shoppers. The company also credited its remodeled stores and expanded merchandise on its website for appealing to households that have a more than $100,000 annual income. Target is scheduled to report quarterly earnings on Wednesday. Not all companies with higher-income customer bases have seen the same strong demand, however. Corporate misfires can also lead to disappointing sales, even if their shoppers aren't necessarily pulling back on their spending.For example, athleisure brand Lululemon's U.S. sales lagged in its most recent quarter, which CEO Calvin McDonald attributed in part to a shortage in key product sizes and not enough colorful items.Then there's Starbucks, which has always positioned itself as a premium coffee brand. The coffee giant announced a surprise decline in its U.S. same-store sales and lowered its full-year forecast, sending its shares tumbling. While CEO Laxman Narasimhan gave a laundry list of factors explaining the weak quarter, including a more value-minded consumer, Bank of America analyst Sara Senatore wrote in a research note that a social media boycott might still be the primary culprit.And Peloton's latest report was the latest in a string of disappointing results for the company. Earlier this month, the pandemic darling fired its chief executive and announced plans to lay off 15% of its staff as fewer consumers bought its pricey equipment or its much cheaper fitness subscriptions in its latest fiscal quarter.""With the economic outlook for consumers unlikely to improve across the balance of this year, Peloton's trajectory on the product front is unlikely to change course ... But worryingly, app subscriptions are also under pressure – most likely because consumers are reviewing their expenses more carefully as they suffer from subscription fatigue,"" GlobalData managing director Neil Saunders said in emailed comments.— CNBC's Melissa Repko and Gabrielle Fonrouge contributed reporting to this story.",CNBC,20/05/2024,"['In this articleWith higher prices and elevated interest rates stubbornly sticking around, Chipotle burrito bowls and European vacations are still on the table for many consumers.', ""But Big Macs and kitchen remodels aren't."", ""The most recent round of quarterly earnings reports helped to sort companies into largely two camps: McDonald's, Starbucks and Home Depot were among the consumer-centric companies that surprised investors with weaker-than-expected results, saying customers had pulled back on their spending."", 'Others, like Sweetgreen and Delta Air Lines, bucked the trend and reported growth.', 'The takeaway?', 'Consumers have become more selective about how and where they spend their dollars.', '""Consumers continue to be even more discriminating with every dollar that they spend as they faced elevated prices in their day-to-day spending,"" McDonald\'s CEO Chris Kempczinski said on the company\'s conference call in late April.', 'For more than two years, consumers have dealt with sharply rising prices.', 'This year, most companies expect that their pricing strategies will return to their pre-pandemic approaches, thanks to stabilizing commodity prices.', ""But that doesn't mean the actual prices seen on grocery store shelves or restaurant menus will fall, and shoppers are feeling that pinch."", 'The consumer price index rose 3.4% over the last 12 months through April, according to Department of Labor data.', ""On Tuesday, a day before the monthly CPI report, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell reiterated that inflation is falling more slowly than expected, which likely means the central bank won't be cutting interest rates anytime soon."", 'Making matters worse, many consumers have run through the savings they accumulated during the pandemic when they were collecting stimulus checks in place of traveling.', 'Instead, many are paying their everyday bills with credit cards as they face higher costs for gas, rent and groceries.', 'The average consumer owes $6,218 on their credit cards, up 8.5% year over year, according to a TransUnion quarterly report out last week.', 'Aurelia Concepcion, 57, a case manager in New York, said she is planning only essential travel this year, drawing the line at visiting family in Georgia and Ohio.', '""Everything is too high ... taxis, rent.""', 'Concepcion says she avoids restaurants: ""It\'s too expensive.', ""I'd rather prepare my own food."", '""Concepcion isn\'t the only consumer changing spending habits.', 'Executives have been warning about a more cautious spending environment for awhile.', ""But it's finally starting to show up in some companies' quarterly results."", 'KFC, Pizza Hut and Starbucks were among the restaurant companies that reported declining same-store sales in the most recent quarter.', ""Home Depot's revenue was weaker than expected because potential customers are putting off renovations until interest rates fall, executives said."", ""And Apple iPhone sales fell 10% in the tech company's latest quarter, suggesting consumers weren't upgrading to the latest version of the smartphone in the patterns that they have in the past."", '""Some of the things that have seen the biggest run-up in prices over the last few years are items that confront people on a daily basis: the cost of eating out, the cost of groceries and the costs of fuel and gasoline and rents,"" said Columbia Business School economics professor Brett House. ""', 'Regardless of whether inflation is slowing amongst those goods, even with lower inflation, prices remain very high, and people get a daily reminder of that.', '""Big-box giant Walmart said last Thursday that shoppers are prioritizing buying food and health-related items over general merchandise, like home goods and electronics.', 'The retailer has reported that trend for several quarters now.', ""Finance chief John David Rainey told CNBC that Walmart's grocery business has gotten a boost from the widening gap between restaurant prices and the cost of cooking at home."", 'Lower-income consumers are struggling more than other demographics.', ""They couldn't save as much during the pandemic, and evidence suggests that they've exhausted those savings, according to House."", 'On top of that, rent prices have surged, and low-income consumers are more likely to rent than own.', 'PepsiCo, for one, particularly called out a weaker low-income consumer.', 'The Gatorade owner saw volume for its North American beverage business fall 5% in the quarter.', '""The lower-income consumer in the U.S. is stretched ... [and] is strategizing a lot to make their budgets get to the end of the month,"" CEO Ramon Laguarta told analysts on the company\'s conference call in April.', 'Pepsi is leaning into promotions and discounts to lure back the low-income shopper.', 'Other companies are similarly hoping deals will attract more customers.', ""McDonald's, king of the low-price fas-food segment, plans to start offering a $5 value meal on June 25.While some CEOs have said that consumers are growing more cautious, others — like those in the airline industry — have celebrated strong and persistent spending."", '""Consumers continue to prioritize travel as a discretionary investment in themselves,"" Ed Bastian, CEO of Delta Air Lines, the most profitable U.S. carrier, said in an interview in April.', ""Delta and its rival United last month each forecast earnings ahead of analysts' estimates for the second quarter."", 'Both carriers offer sprawling global networks and have benefited from a rebound in international travel in the wake of the pandemic, particularly to Europe and popular destinations in Asia for U.S. travelers like Japan.', 'Both carriers have predicted record summer travel demand.', 'Those airline trends align with a broader consumer shift that started after pandemic lockdowns: spending more money on experiences rather than apparel or electronics.', '""We\'re still spending disproportionately on activities and services rather than on goods,"" House said.', 'Delta and United are also capitalizing on travelers who have been willing to pay up for more expensive seats, like first class or premium economy.', 'U.S. airlines have been racing to add more high-priced seating to their planes and grow lounges for top spenders.', ""Inflation hasn't hurt high-income consumers as much as it has the budget-conscious, giving them more room to spend."", 'Higher-income consumers have also bolstered fast-casual restaurant chains, like Chipotle, that come in at a slightly higher price point than the cheapest options.', ""The burrito chain's same-store sales grew7% during the first quarter, fueled by a 5.4% increase in foot traffic."", ""Chipotle has a strong perception of value among diners, CEO Brian Niccol said on the company's conference call."", 'Executives have also previously emphasized that most of its customers come from higher-income brackets.', 'Even Walmart have beenattracting consumers with deeper pockets.', 'As customers pay more for groceries, the discounterhasattracted moreaffluent customers and stolen market share from rivalslikeTarget, which has historically been more popular with wealthier shoppers.', 'The company also credited its remodeled stores and expanded merchandise on its website for appealing to households that have a more than $100,000 annual income.', 'Target is scheduled to report quarterly earnings on Wednesday.', 'Not all companies with higher-income customer bases have seen the same strong demand, however.', ""Corporate misfires can also lead to disappointing sales, even if their shoppers aren't necessarily pulling back on their spending."", ""For example, athleisure brand Lululemon's U.S. sales lagged in its most recent quarter, which CEO Calvin McDonald attributed in part to a shortage in key product sizes and not enough colorful items."", ""Then there's Starbucks, which has always positioned itself as a premium coffee brand."", 'The coffee giant announced a surprise decline in its U.S. same-store sales and lowered its full-year forecast, sending its shares tumbling.', 'While CEO Laxman Narasimhan gave a laundry list of factors explaining the weak quarter, including a more value-minded consumer, Bank of America analyst Sara Senatore wrote in a research note that a social media boycott might still be the primary culprit.', ""And Peloton's latest report was the latest in a string of disappointing results for the company."", 'Earlier this month, the pandemic darling fired its chief executive and announced plans to lay off 15% of its staff as fewer consumers bought its pricey equipment or its much cheaper fitness subscriptions in its latest fiscal quarter.', '""With the economic outlook for consumers unlikely to improve across the balance of this year, Peloton\'s trajectory on the product front is unlikely to change course ... But worryingly, app subscriptions are also under pressure – most likely because consumers are reviewing their expenses more carefully as they suffer from subscription fatigue,"" GlobalData managing director Neil Saunders said in emailed comments.—', ""CNBC's Melissa Repko and Gabrielle Fonrouge contributed reporting to this story.""]",0.0637336559460311,"McDonald's, king of the low-price fas-food segment, plans to start offering a $5 value meal on June 25.While some CEOs have said that consumers are growing more cautious, others — like those in the airline industry — have celebrated strong and persistent spending.","""With the economic outlook for consumers unlikely to improve across the balance of this year, Peloton's trajectory on the product front is unlikely to change course ... But worryingly, app subscriptions are also under pressure – most likely because consumers are reviewing their expenses more carefully as they suffer from subscription fatigue,"" GlobalData managing director Neil Saunders said in emailed comments.—",-0.0166200759510199,"The average consumer owes $6,218 on their credit cards, up 8.5% year over year, according to a TransUnion quarterly report out last week.","Home Depot's revenue was weaker than expected because potential customers are putting off renovations until interest rates fall, executives said.",2024-05-20 "Bilt’s May Rent Day promotion: Redeem points toward rent, get free home decor",https://edition.cnn.com/cnn-underscored/travel/bilt-rent-day-promotion," Updated 4:22 PM EDT, Thu April 25, 2024 ","The Bilt Mastercard® (see rates and fees) has been incredibly popular since its inception in 2021. With a top-notch travel rewards program and the opportunity to earn points on rent with no transaction fees (up to 100,000 points per calendar year), it’s no surprise to see the card flourish over the past few years. In addition, Bilt Rewards — the loyalty program behind the Bilt Mastercard — offers lucrative promotions throughout the year, with the most popular known as Rent Day. With Bilt’s Rent Day promotion — which runs the first of every month — card members earn double points on all purchases (excluding rent) and can take advantage of a unique promotion that changes every month. Bilt typically announces these promotions just a few days before Rent Day. Bilt Rewards just announced the May edition of its monthly Rent Day promotion, and for better or for worse, it’s different from offers we’ve seen in the past. Instead of a travel-related offer (which has been the norm), Bilt is incentivizing members to redeem points toward their monthly rent payment in exchange for a credit toward home decor products in the Bilt Home Collection. Additionally, Bilt recently announced a new partnership with Blade, a swanky helicopter transfer service that runs scheduled flights between New York City airports and Manhattan’s heliports. Let’s take a closer look at this upcoming Rent Day promotion and Bilt’s partnership with Blade. Between April 25 and May 1, Bilt members who redeem points toward their rent payment will get 100% of those points back to redeem toward items in the Bilt Home Collection. You can use a minimum of 1,000 points and a maximum of 50,000 points for this offer, and the Home Collection credit is good for six months. However, your points are only worth 0.55 cents apiece when you redeem them toward your rent payment. For example, if you redeem 10,000 points toward rent, you’ll get a $55 discount. Travel website The Points Guy values Bilt Rewards points at 2.05 cents apiece when redeemed toward travel, so this isn’t a great redemption in comparison. However, it might be worth considering this month if you’re looking for new home decor anyway. The Bilt Home Collection usually has things like artwork from partner artists, interesting vases and different types of cups. This month, Bilt will also offer curated Rent Day dining experiences at restaurants around the country. This includes unique tasting menus, wine pairings and omakase experiences. These dining experiences will cost $150, or you can redeem 15,000 Bilt points for you and a guest. Availability will be limited, but you can try to grab a seat on April 26. Those with Bilt elite status will receive priority access to reservations. Platinum status members will have first access at 12 p.m. EST, Gold status members at 12:10 p.m. EST and Silver status members at 12:20 p.m. EST. All other Bilt Rewards members can book at 12:30 p.m. EST. Dining experiences will be available at select restaurants in New York, Miami, Seattle, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Dallas, Boston and Washington, D.C. Every month on Rent Day, Bilt also gives members with the Bilt Mastercard a chance to earn double points on all purchases (excluding rent). So, if you have a new restaurant you want to check out, flights to book or any other purchases to make, it could be worth waiting until May 1 to earn more points on your purchase. And if you’re dining at a restaurant that participates in Bilt Dining, you can increase your earnings up to a whopping 11 points per dollar. But remember, to earn Bilt points with your Bilt Mastercard, you must use the card five times each statement period (see Rewards & Benefits). Earlier this month, Bilt announced a new partnership with Blade, where Bilt Reward members will earn bonus points on every Blade booking. Members will earn 2 bonus points for every dollar spent on Blade flights as long as they pay with a credit or debit card linked to their Bilt Rewards account. Again, you’ll get more Blade benefits if you have Bilt elite status. These are nice benefits to have if you live in New York. Blade has lounges at its heliports on West 30th Street and East 34th Street, both of which are outfitted with a complimentary bar, coffee and free snacks. If getting a discount on rent is your preferred way to redeem Bilt Rewards points, this month’s Rent Day promotion is a great way to earn bonus points to put toward furnishing your home. If you’d rather redeem toward travel, focus on earning double points on all purchases on May 1. Learn more and apply now for the Bilt Mastercard. Looking for a travel credit card? Find out which cards CNN Underscored Money chose as the best travel credit cards currently available.",CNN,25/04/2024,"['The Bilt Mastercard® (seerates and fees) has been incredibly popular since its inception in 2021.', 'With a top-notch travel rewards program and the opportunity to earn points on rent with no transaction fees (up to 100,000 points per calendar year), it’s no surprise to see the card flourish over the past few years.', 'In addition, Bilt Rewards —the loyalty program behind the Bilt Mastercard — offers lucrative promotions throughout the year, with the most popular known as Rent Day.', 'With Bilt’s Rent Day promotion —which runs the first of every month — card members earn double points on all purchases (excluding rent) and can take advantage of a unique promotion that changes every month.', 'Bilt typically announces these promotions just a few days before Rent Day.', 'Bilt Rewards just announced the May edition of its monthly Rent Day promotion, and for better or for worse, it’s different from offers we’ve seen in the past.', 'Instead of a travel-related offer (which has been the norm), Bilt is incentivizing members to redeem points toward their monthly rent payment in exchange for a credit toward home decor products in the Bilt Home Collection.', 'Additionally, Bilt recently announced a new partnership with Blade,a swanky helicopter transfer service that runs scheduled flights between New York City airports and Manhattan’s heliports.', 'Let’s take a closer look at this upcoming Rent Day promotion and Bilt’s partnership with Blade.', 'Between April 25 and May 1, Bilt members who redeem points toward their rent payment will get 100% of those points back to redeem toward items in the Bilt Home Collection.', 'You can use a minimum of 1,000 points and a maximum of 50,000 points for this offer, and the Home Collection credit is good for six months.', 'However, your points are only worth 0.55 cents apiece when you redeem them toward your rent payment.', 'For example, if you redeem 10,000 points toward rent, you’ll get a $55 discount.', 'Travel website The Points Guy values Bilt Rewards points at 2.05 cents apiece when redeemed toward travel, so this isn’t a great redemption in comparison.', 'However, it might be worth considering this month if you’re looking for new home decor anyway.', 'The Bilt Home Collection usually has things like artwork from partner artists, interesting vases and different types of cups.', 'This month, Bilt will also offer curated Rent Day dining experiences at restaurants around the country.', 'This includes unique tasting menus, wine pairings and omakase experiences.', 'These dining experiences will cost $150, or you can redeem 15,000 Bilt points for you and a guest.', 'Availability will be limited, but you can try to grab a seat on April 26.', 'Those with Bilt elite status will receive priority access to reservations.', 'Platinum status members will have first access at 12 p.m. EST, Gold status members at 12:10 p.m. EST and Silver status members at 12:20 p.m. EST.', 'All other Bilt Rewards members can book at 12:30 p.m. EST.', 'Dining experiences will be available at select restaurants in New York, Miami, Seattle, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Dallas, Boston and Washington, D.C. Every month on Rent Day, Bilt also gives members with the Bilt Mastercard a chance to earn double points on all purchases (excluding rent).', 'So, if you have a new restaurant you want to check out, flights to book or any other purchases to make, it could be worth waiting until May 1 to earn more points on your purchase.', 'And if you’re dining at a restaurant that participates in Bilt Dining, you can increase your earnings up to a whopping 11 points per dollar.', 'But remember, to earn Bilt points with your Bilt Mastercard, you must use the card five times each statement period (see Rewards & Benefits).', 'Earlier this month, Bilt announced a new partnership with Blade, where Bilt Reward members will earn bonus points on every Blade booking.', 'Members will earn 2 bonus points for every dollar spent on Blade flights as long as they pay with a credit or debit card linked to their Bilt Rewards account.', 'Again, you’ll get more Blade benefits if you have Bilt elite status.', 'These are nice benefits to have if you live in New York.', 'Blade has lounges at its heliports on West 30th Street and East 34th Street, both of which are outfitted with a complimentary bar, coffee and free snacks.', 'If getting a discount on rent is your preferred way to redeem Bilt Rewards points, this month’s Rent Day promotion is a great way to earn bonus points to put toward furnishing your home.', 'If you’d rather redeem toward travel, focus on earning double points on all purchases on May 1.', 'Learn more and apply now for the Bilt Mastercard.', 'Looking for a travel credit card?', 'Find out which cardsCNN Underscored Moneychose as thebest travel credit cardscurrently available.']",0.3487739443917381,"Travel website The Points Guy values Bilt Rewards points at 2.05 cents apiece when redeemed toward travel, so this isn’t a great redemption in comparison.",,0.978265517950058,"And if you’re dining at a restaurant that participates in Bilt Dining, you can increase your earnings up to a whopping 11 points per dollar.",,2024-05-20 35-year mortgages: 'I had no choice but to get one',https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cn3dded32j2o,2024-05-19T00:47:54.856Z,"Young homebuyers are facing huge challenges when it comes to getting on - and staying on - the housing ladder. Nicola Webb, a 34-year-old nurse, felt she had little choice but to opt for an ultra-long mortgage when purchasing her first home last year. It's set to end when she is 68, but she says stretching out the repayments is ""the only way I can just about afford my mortgage as a single homeowner"". “I've not known lower mortgage rates so I just accept what it is.” Despite the fact that she managed to save a chunky deposit for her £147,000 two-bedroom flat in Gloucestershire, Nicola's five-year fixed rate mortgage costs £598 a month - about a third of her monthly wages after tax and student loan deductions. Once her student loan is paid off - or eventually written off - she hopes to reduce the length of her mortgage term from 35 years, or look at using any extra disposable income to overpay it. She says she's grateful she has been able to get on the housing ladder at all. While mortgage costs take up a large part of her income, she thinks it is still cheaper than renting in her local area. ""I was having no luck at all with renting... and for me it's all about trying to keep it as cheap as possible."" Recent figures suggest that Nicola's situation is becoming more and more common. Data from the Bank of England shows that hundreds of thousands of homeowners have taken out mortgages in the last three years that they will still be paying off into retirement. While longer mortgage terms might make repayments more affordable in the here and now, homeowners will be paying off more overall in interest. Some industry figures have also expressed concern that buyers may not be able to afford a mortgage once they retire and will raid their pension savings to clear their home loan, leaving them with less to live on in old age. But for some, a longer term of 35 or 40 years is seen as a temporary solution as they wait to see if mortgage rates will fall back from relative highs. Martin Tapper, a mortgage broker based in Essex, told the BBC that most of the first-time buyers he has advised this year have opted for 40-year terms. ""A young family can escape exorbitant rent costs in order to purchase a home where the mortgage cost is far cheaper on a longer term,"" he suggests. He adds he would only guide a client to these longer terms if they were the ""right kind"", saying he always recommends switching back to a shorter term later on if possible, for example if a client's wage has gone up or if they're moving home. And, he says, it is vital to get insurance to protect against payments becoming tricky if someone's health deteriorates or they lose their job. For 30-year-old Shane Lees, weighing up the pros and cons of an ultra-long mortgage has been a serious undertaking. He and his partner are remortgaging so that they can buy a three-bedroom house in West Sussex where they can start a family. After speaking to six or seven mortgage brokers, they have decided to choose a mortgage term of 35 years, dropping down to 25 years at the end of a two-year fixed deal. Shane says that he and his partner are now less likely to go for something at the top end of their budget due to the prospect of higher monthly repayments. They have opted for a lender Shane describes as ""realistic"", which would be willing to renegotiate at the end of the two-year fixed deal, while most were offering a rate of about 5.5%. The pressure faced by younger homeowners like Shane is pretty clear, with the sharp rise in the proportion of mortgages that run beyond state pension age. The number of homeowners aged under 30 taking out such mortgages more than doubled over the two-year period, while for those aged under 40 the number was up 30%. But Sarah Coles, head of personal finance at Hargreaves Lansdown, says people shouldn't bank on interest rates being lower when they come to reduce the term later. ""Economists are constantly changing their expectations for when the Bank of England will cut rates. ""Back in January some of them were predicting cuts as early as March, and now we’re expecting them this summer instead. Even then, cuts aren’t expected particularly rapidly, so anyone holding their breath for much lower rates will have quite a wait on their hands."" She suggests that those on a 35 or 40-year mortgage need not only a plan in place to pay it off, but also a plan B for life's ""unexpected twists and turns"". For example, if you're carrying your mortgage into retirement and expect to sell up and downsize to clear the debt, you need to think about what to do if you change your mind and want to stay in your home, she says. ""It can be exactly what people need to make their mortgage more affordable, but they need to appreciate the wider implications."" For homeowners like Shane, he appreciates there may be risks attached but feels he's in a lucky position to have this problem in the first place. Additional reporting by Bernadette McCague. Read more here ",BBC,19/05/2024,"['Young homebuyers are facing huge challenges when it comes to getting on - and staying on - the housing ladder.', 'Nicola Webb, a 34-year-old nurse, felt she had little choice but to opt for an ultra-long mortgage when purchasing her first home last year.', 'It\'s set to end when she is 68, but she says stretching out the repayments is ""the only way I can just about afford my mortgage as a single homeowner"". “', ""I've not known lower mortgage rates so I just accept what it is.”"", ""Despite the fact that she managed to save a chunky deposit for her £147,000 two-bedroom flat in Gloucestershire, Nicola's five-year fixed rate mortgage costs £598 a month - about a third of her monthly wages after tax and student loan deductions."", 'Once her student loan is paid off - or eventually written off - she hopes to reduce the length of her mortgage term from 35 years, or look at using any extra disposable income to overpay it.', ""She says she's grateful she has been able to get on the housing ladder at all."", 'While mortgage costs take up a large part of her income, she thinks it is still cheaper than renting in her local area. ""', 'I was having no luck at all with renting... and for me it\'s all about trying to keep it as cheap as possible.""', ""Recent figures suggest that Nicola's situation is becoming more and more common."", 'Data from the Bank of England shows that hundreds of thousands of homeowners have taken out mortgages in the last three years that they will still be paying off into retirement.', 'While longer mortgage terms might make repayments more affordable in the here and now, homeowners will be paying off more overall in interest.', 'Some industry figures have also expressed concern that buyers may not be able to afford a mortgage once they retire and will raid their pension savings to clear their home loan, leaving them with less to live on in old age.', 'But for some, a longer term of 35 or 40 years is seen as a temporary solution as they wait to see if mortgage rates will fall back from relative highs.', 'Martin Tapper, a mortgage broker based in Essex, told the BBC that most of the first-time buyers he has advised this year have opted for 40-year terms. ""', 'A young family can escape exorbitant rent costs in order to purchase a home where the mortgage cost is far cheaper on a longer term,"" he suggests.', 'He adds he would only guide a client to these longer terms if they were the ""right kind"", saying he always recommends switching back to a shorter term later on if possible, for example if a client\'s wage has gone up or if they\'re moving home.', ""And, he says, it is vital to get insurance to protect against payments becoming tricky if someone's health deteriorates or they lose their job."", 'For 30-year-old Shane Lees, weighing up the pros and cons of an ultra-long mortgage has been a serious undertaking.', 'He and his partner are remortgaging so that they can buy a three-bedroom house in West Sussex where they can start a family.', 'After speaking to six or seven mortgage brokers, they have decided to choose a mortgage term of 35 years, dropping down to 25 years at the end of a two-year fixed deal.', 'Shane says that he and his partner are now less likely to go for something at the top end of their budget due to the prospect of higher monthly repayments.', 'They have opted for a lender Shane describes as ""realistic"", which would be willing to renegotiate at the end of the two-year fixed deal, while most were offering a rate of about 5.5%.', 'The pressure faced by younger homeowners like Shane is pretty clear, with the sharp rise in the proportion of mortgages that run beyond state pension age.', 'The number of homeowners aged under 30 taking out such mortgages more than doubled over the two-year period, while for those aged under 40 the number was up 30%.', 'But Sarah Coles, head of personal finance at Hargreaves Lansdown, says people shouldn\'t bank on interest rates being lower when they come to reduce the term later. ""', 'Economists are constantly changing their expectations for when the Bank of England will cut rates. ""', 'Back in January some of them were predicting cuts as early as March, and now we’re expecting them this summer instead.', 'Even then, cuts aren’t expected particularly rapidly, so anyone holding their breath for much lower rates will have quite a wait on their hands.""', 'She suggests that those on a 35 or 40-year mortgage need not only a plan in place to pay it off, but also a plan B for life\'s ""unexpected twists and turns"".', 'For example, if you\'re carrying your mortgage into retirement and expect to sell up and downsize to clear the debt, you need to think about what to do if you change your mind and want to stay in your home, she says. ""', 'It can be exactly what people need to make their mortgage more affordable, but they need to appreciate the wider implications.""', ""For homeowners like Shane, he appreciates there may be risks attached but feels he's in a lucky position to have this problem in the first place."", 'Additional reporting by Bernadette McCague.', 'Read more here']",0.1786289152445031,"The pressure faced by younger homeowners like Shane is pretty clear, with the sharp rise in the proportion of mortgages that run beyond state pension age.","Even then, cuts aren’t expected particularly rapidly, so anyone holding their breath for much lower rates will have quite a wait on their hands.""",0.403078269213438,"The number of homeowners aged under 30 taking out such mortgages more than doubled over the two-year period, while for those aged under 40 the number was up 30%.","Some industry figures have also expressed concern that buyers may not be able to afford a mortgage once they retire and will raid their pension savings to clear their home loan, leaving them with less to live on in old age.",2024-05-20 China trade: Beijing hits back at US and EU with plastics probe,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cw004vvkj1xo,2024-05-20T02:04:40.429Z,"China has launched an anti-dumping probe into imports of a widely used plastic from the US, EU, Taiwan and Japan. The announcement from the Ministry of Commerce that it will investigate imports of polyoxymethylene copolymer - which is used in electronics and cars - is a signal that China will hit back in its trade disputes with the US and Europe. It comes as China's trade rows with the US and the EU have deepened in recent months. Less than a week ago, Washington sharply increased tariffs on Chinese goods, including electric vehicles (EVs), solar panels and computer chips. The new US moves also expanded on sweeping border taxes that were imposed on Chinese goods under the Trump administration. In response, China's commerce ministry said the new moves would ""severely affect the atmosphere for bilateral cooperation"", and criticised what it characterised as the politicisation of economic issues. Ahead of the heavily-trailed White House announcement, a spokesperson for China's foreign ministry said it would ""take all necessary measures to safeguard its legitimate rights and interests"". Separately on Monday, China sanctioned three American defence firms over their sales of weapons to Taiwan, state media said. The announcement that General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, General Dynamics Land Systems, and Boeing Defense, Space & Security are barred from ""import and export"" business in China came as the self-ruled island inaugurated a new president. Senior executives of all three companies are banned from entering, working or living in China, the commerce ministry said. Meanwhile, Europe has launched a series of probes into Chinese imports. On Friday, the EU said it would launch an investigation into Chinese tinplate steel. And last month, Brussels said it was probing two Chinese solar panel makers, that it says benefit from government subsidies. The European Commission (EC), which oversees the EU's trade policies, has also given itself a 4 July deadline to decide whether to impose measures against imports of Chinese-made EVs. ",BBC,20/05/2024,"['China has launched an anti-dumping probe into imports of a widely used plastic from the US, EU, Taiwan and Japan.', 'The announcement from the Ministry of Commerce that it will investigate imports of polyoxymethylene copolymer - which is used in electronics and cars - is a signal that China will hit back in its trade disputes with the US and Europe.', ""It comes as China's trade rows with the US and the EU have deepened in recent months."", 'Less than a week ago, Washington sharply increased tariffs on Chinese goods, including electric vehicles (EVs), solar panels and computer chips.', 'The new US moves also expanded on sweeping border taxes that were imposed on Chinese goods under the Trump administration.', 'In response, China\'s commerce ministry said the new moves would ""severely affect the atmosphere for bilateral cooperation"", and criticised what it characterised as the politicisation of economic issues.', 'Ahead of the heavily-trailed White House announcement, a spokesperson for China\'s foreign ministry said it would ""take all necessary measures to safeguard its legitimate rights and interests"".', 'Separately on Monday, China sanctioned three American defence firms over their sales of weapons to Taiwan, state media said.', 'The announcement that General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, General Dynamics Land Systems, and Boeing Defense, Space & Security are barred from ""import and export"" business in China came as the self-ruled island inaugurated a new president.', 'Senior executives of all three companies are banned from entering, working or living in China, the commerce ministry said.', 'Meanwhile, Europe has launched a series of probes into Chinese imports.', 'On Friday, the EU said it would launch an investigation into Chinese tinplate steel.', 'And last month, Brussels said it was probing two Chinese solar panel makers, that it says benefit from government subsidies.', ""The European Commission (EC), which oversees the EU's trade policies, has also given itself a 4 July deadline to decide whether to impose measures against imports of Chinese-made EVs.""]",-0.0438265172752605,"The announcement that General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, General Dynamics Land Systems, and Boeing Defense, Space & Security are barred from ""import and export"" business in China came as the self-ruled island inaugurated a new president.","In response, China's commerce ministry said the new moves would ""severely affect the atmosphere for bilateral cooperation"", and criticised what it characterised as the politicisation of economic issues.",-0.6279851595560709,The new US moves also expanded on sweeping border taxes that were imposed on Chinese goods under the Trump administration.,"In response, China's commerce ministry said the new moves would ""severely affect the atmosphere for bilateral cooperation"", and criticised what it characterised as the politicisation of economic issues.",2024-05-20 Boeing boss's $33m pay package approved,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c72pv86n5r3o,2024-05-17T17:16:00.578Z,"Boeing shareholders have signed off on the plane-maker's plan to grant outgoing boss Dave Calhoun a 2023 pay package worth nearly $33m (£25m). A majority voted in favour of the plan, which had drawn criticism as the company grapples with a crisis sparked by the mid-air blowout of a panel on one of its planes in January. Such pay votes, held at the company's annual meetings, are not binding. A breakdown of the vote was not immediately available. Ahead of the meeting, at least one prominent shareholder advisory group had criticised the plan and it also drew attention from some investors who spoke at the event. The firm's decision to keep outgoing boss Dave Calhoun on the company's board of directors had raised questions as well, but was also approved. Mr Calhoun's compensation package included salary of $1.4m (£1.1m) and stock awards worth about $30m (£23m) when granted. That compared to a package of roughly $22.6m (£17m) in 2022. In a question-and answer session after the vote, the firm was asked how the compensation for Mr Calhoun and others were ""justified"" given the severe challenges now facing the company. New board chairman Steve Mollenkopf said the board had reduced some 2024 awards for executives after the accident and moved swiftly to overhaul the design of its pay incentives. That included giving product safety the primary weight in determining performance, instead of financial factors - such as cash flow and share price - as had been the case previously, he said. But both he and Mr Calhoun acknowledged the strains facing the company, some of which Mr Calhoun described as ""potentially existential"" in nature. The Alaska Airlines incident revived questions about the firm's manufacturing and safety procedures and has spawned numerous investigations and lawsuits. Just days ago, the US Department of Justice (DOJ) said it was considering whether to prosecute Boeing over deadly crashes involving its 737 Max aircraft in 2018 and 2019, after determining it had breached a deal that shielded it from criminal charges. In March, Boeing said Mr Calhoun would step down by the end of the year. The search for his replacement is a key focus of the company now, Mr Mollenkopf said. ""The months and years ahead are critically important for our company as we take the necessary steps to regain the trust lost in recent times,"" he said. In putting the pay package to shareholders earlier this year, the company praised how Mr Calhoun had steered the company through challenges such as Covid since 2020. It said he had responded to the Alaska Airlines blowout ""in the right way"". ""The 737 MAX accidents and COVID have combined to create tremendous stress on the Company’s manufacturing operations and supply chain,"" it said. ""However, the Board believes that Mr. Calhoun’s primary focus on safety, quality and transparency is exactly what Boeing has needed, and continues to need."" ",BBC,17/05/2024,"[""Boeing shareholders have signed off on the plane-maker's plan to grant outgoing boss Dave Calhoun a 2023 pay package worth nearly $33m (£25m)."", 'A majority voted in favour of the plan, which had drawn criticism as the company grapples with a crisis sparked by the mid-air blowout of a panel on one of its planes in January.', ""Such pay votes, held at the company's annual meetings, are not binding."", 'A breakdown of the vote was not immediately available.', 'Ahead of the meeting, at least one prominent shareholder advisory group had criticised the plan and it also drew attention from some investors who spoke at the event.', ""The firm's decision to keep outgoing boss Dave Calhoun on the company's board of directors had raised questions as well, but was also approved."", ""Mr Calhoun's compensation package included salary of $1.4m (£1.1m) and stock awards worth about $30m (£23m) when granted."", 'That compared to a package of roughly $22.6m (£17m) in 2022.', 'In a question-and answer session after the vote, the firm was asked how the compensation for Mr Calhoun and others were ""justified"" given the severe challenges now facing the company.', 'New board chairman Steve Mollenkopf said the board had reduced some 2024 awards for executives after the accident and moved swiftly to overhaul the design of its pay incentives.', 'That included giving product safety the primary weight in determining performance, instead of financial factors - such as cash flow and share price - as had been the case previously, he said.', 'But both he and Mr Calhoun acknowledged the strains facing the company, some of which Mr Calhoun described as ""potentially existential"" in nature.', ""The Alaska Airlines incident revived questions about the firm's manufacturing and safety procedures and has spawned numerous investigations and lawsuits."", 'Just days ago, the US Department of Justice (DOJ) said it was considering whether to prosecute Boeing over deadly crashes involving its 737 Max aircraft in 2018 and 2019, after determining it had breached a deal that shielded it from criminal charges.', 'In March, Boeing said Mr Calhoun would step down by the end of the year.', 'The search for his replacement is a key focus of the company now, Mr Mollenkopf said. ""', 'The months and years ahead are critically important for our company as we take the necessary steps to regain the trust lost in recent times,"" he said.', 'In putting the pay package to shareholders earlier this year, the company praised how Mr Calhoun had steered the company through challenges such as Covid since 2020.', 'It said he had responded to the Alaska Airlines blowout ""in the right way"". ""', 'The 737 MAX accidents and COVID have combined to create tremendous stress on the Company’s manufacturing operations and supply chain,"" it said. ""', 'However, the Board believes that Mr. Calhoun’s primary focus on safety, quality and transparency is exactly what Boeing has needed, and continues to need.""']",0.1241324687216989,"That included giving product safety the primary weight in determining performance, instead of financial factors - such as cash flow and share price - as had been the case previously, he said.","A majority voted in favour of the plan, which had drawn criticism as the company grapples with a crisis sparked by the mid-air blowout of a panel on one of its planes in January.",0.0022622227668762,Boeing shareholders have signed off on the plane-maker's plan to grant outgoing boss Dave Calhoun a 2023 pay package worth nearly $33m (£25m).,"The 737 MAX accidents and COVID have combined to create tremendous stress on the Company’s manufacturing operations and supply chain,"" it said. """,2024-05-20 Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama vote against unionizing in blow to big UAW push,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/business/uaw-mercedes-benz-rejected/index.html," Updated 5:46 PM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","Autoworkers at a Mercedes Benz plant in Alabama voted against joining the United Auto Workers union Friday, potentially stalling hopes of a rapidly growing organizing wave for autoworkers in the southern United States. The result was a close outcome. Out of the valid votes counted, 56% of workers voted “no,” while 44% voted “yes” for unionization, according to Mercedes-Benz. The National Labor Relations Board said Friday there were more than 5,000 eligible voters. The UAW was hoping to carry its strong momentum with the Alabama vote, as its decision to use a “stand up strike” strategy, hitting the Big Three automakers all at once, brought unprecedented attention and record contracts for workers. And last month, it won a union election at a Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, its first victory in three attempts to organize the factory. Under relatively new UAW president Shawn Fain, the UAW had shifted its strategy for a membership push in non-unionized factories, many of which are located in the American South. In a March interview with Car and Driver, Fain said the profit margins for the Japanese, Korean and German automakers were “obscenely more gross than they were at the Big Three, and yet their workers get less.” “I truly believe we’re going to see a huge shift this year. I think we’re gonna win in the South,” he said in the interview. In a press conference Friday, however, Fain said that losses are part of the process and that the union will “carry on and keep on fighting.” “Not the result we wanted today, but I’m very proud of these workers. We keep our heads up and we march on,” Fain said. In an emailed statement Friday, Fain said the Alabama workers “won serious gains in this campaign.” Fain said they raised wages with the “UAW bump,” which is when non-union companies gave non-unionized employees raises to compete with union contracts. Mercedes-Benz also named a new Alabama CEO ahead of the election. Fain said Mercedes encouraged workers to give the new CEO a chance before elections. “That’s exactly what Volkswagen told its workers in 2019. And in 2024, Volkswagen workers realized it’s not about a CEO. It’s about a voice on the job, it’s about getting our lives back, and getting our time back. The only path to do that is through a union contract,” he wrote. In a statement, Mercedes-Benz US International said that “our goal throughout this process was to ensure every eligible Team Member had the opportunity to participate in a fair election.” “At MBUSI, our primary focus is always to provide a safe and supportive work environment for our Team Members, so they can build superior vehicles for the world. We look forward to continuing to work directly with our Team Members to ensure MBUSI is not only their employer of choice, but a place they would recommend to friends and family,” the statement continued. Six southern governors from Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas issued a joint statement in April discouraging the union campaign, warning it could put workers’ jobs, as well as the auto industry in the South, in jeopardy. The statement came a day before workers at Volkswagen voted on joining the UAW. “The reality is companies have choices when it comes to where to invest and bring jobs and opportunity. We have worked tirelessly on behalf of our constituents to bring good-paying jobs to our states. These jobs have become part of the fabric of the automotive manufacturing industry,” the statement said. In a statement Friday, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey said that “automotive manufacturing is one of Alabama’s crown jewel industries” and that the state is “committed to keeping it that way.” “The workers in Vance have spoken, and they have spoken clearly! Alabama is not Michigan, and we are not the Sweet Home to the UAW,” Ivey said in the statement. Mercedes allegedly pushed back against unionization efforts in other ways, according to the UAW. The National Labor Relations Board said it is investigating six unfair labor practice allegations filed by the UAW against Mercedes-Benz since March. Those accusations from the UAW allege Mercedes disciplined employees for discussing unionization during work, prohibited distribution of union materials, surveilled employees, and forced employees to attend “captive audience meetings,” which is a mandatory meeting during work hours meant to discourage unionizing. Mercedes-Benz US International denied these claims, and said in a statement it “has not interfered with or retaliated against any Team Member in their right to pursue union representation.” It continued, “We do not believe these claims have merit and we look forward to presenting our case to the NLRB.” The UAW said it began an effort to organize workers at 13 non-union auto US factories in November 2023. The effort included three US-based electric vehicle makers — Tesla, Rivian and Lucid — as well as 10 foreign automakers that build cars in the US — BMW, Honda, Hyundai, Mazda, Mercedes, Nissan, Subaru, Toyota, Volkswagen, and Volvo. The South has been an attractive region for foreign automakers to open plants because of generous tax breaks and cheaper, non-union labor that generally doesn’t receive the wages or benefits won by unionized workers. But last month, hourly workers at Volkswagen’s plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, overwhelmingly voted to join the UAW — 73% of the 3,600 workers at the plant who cast ballots had voted to join the union. The Chattanooga victory didn’t come easy for the UAW. Volkswagen didn’t win until its third union drive, said Art Wheaton, director of labor studies at Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations’ Buffalo office. This was the Mercedes plant’s first strong push, and labor experts say a loss at Mercedes isn’t the end of the push to organize the South. “It’s not a catastrophe if they don’t win (the first time). Primarily because they’re facing a very active Mercedes Benz trying to block them from organizing, you got governors in the South trying to block them from organizing, and they don’t have the same track record or history or infrastructure in Alabama,” Wheaton said to CNN earlier this week. In a press conference Friday, Fain said the difference between Mercedes and Volkswagen was that “Volkswagen was more neutral.” “Until we can have an absolute, neutral, free and fair election… This is the fight we have to take on,” Fain said. There are about 150,000 workers at nonunion auto plants in the United States today. That’s roughly the same amount of workers represented at the Big Three. Since 1990, the South’s share of auto jobs has doubled from around 15% to 30% today, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. Meanwhile, the Midwest’s share has declined from 60% to 45%. “It’s not horrible if they lose, because it gives the UAW the chance to see where they’re at. They can gauge how much support they have,” Wheaton said. This story has been updated with additional developments and context. - CNN’s Chris Isidore and Nathaniel Meyersohn contributed to this report.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['Autoworkers at a Mercedes Benz plant in Alabama voted against joining the United Auto Workers union Friday, potentially stalling hopes of a rapidly growing organizing wave for autoworkers in the southern United States.', 'The result was a close outcome.', 'Out of the valid votes counted, 56% of workers voted “no,” while 44% voted “yes” for unionization, according to Mercedes-Benz.', 'The National Labor Relations Board said Friday there were more than 5,000 eligible voters.', 'The UAW was hoping to carry its strong momentum with the Alabama vote, as its decision to use a“stand up strike” strategy,hitting the Big Three automakers all at once, brought unprecedented attention and record contracts for workers.', 'And last month, it won a union election at aVolkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, its first victory in three attempts to organize the factory.', 'Under relatively new UAW president Shawn Fain, the UAW had shifted its strategy for a membership push in non-unionized factories, many of which are located in the American South.', 'In a March interview with Car and Driver, Fain said the profit margins for the Japanese, Korean and German automakerswere “obscenely more gross than they were at the Big Three, and yet their workers get less.”', '“I truly believe we’re going to see a huge shift this year.', 'I think we’re gonna win in the South,”he said in the interview.', 'In a press conference Friday, however, Fain said that losses are part of the process and that the union will “carry on and keep on fighting.”', '“Not the result we wanted today, but I’m very proud of these workers.', 'We keep our heads up and we march on,” Fain said.', 'In an emailed statement Friday, Fain said the Alabama workers “won serious gains in this campaign.”', 'Fain said they raised wages with the “UAW bump,” which is when non-union companies gave non-unionized employees raises to compete with union contracts.', 'Mercedes-Benz also named a new Alabama CEO ahead of the election.', 'Fain said Mercedes encouraged workers to give the new CEO a chance before elections.', '“That’s exactly what Volkswagen told its workers in 2019.', 'And in 2024, Volkswagen workers realized it’s not about a CEO.', 'It’s about a voice on the job, it’s about getting our lives back, and getting our time back.', 'The only path to do that is through a union contract,” he wrote.', 'In a statement, Mercedes-Benz US International said that “our goal throughout this process was to ensure every eligible Team Member had the opportunity to participate in a fair election.”', '“At MBUSI, our primary focus is always to provide a safe and supportive work environment for our Team Members, so they can build superior vehicles for the world.', 'We look forward to continuing to work directly with our Team Members to ensure MBUSI is not only their employer of choice, but a place they would recommend to friends and family,” the statement continued.', 'Six southern governors from Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas issueda joint statement in April discouraging the union campaign, warning it could put workers’ jobs, as well as the auto industry in the South, in jeopardy.', 'The statement came a day before workers at Volkswagen voted on joining the UAW.', '“The reality is companies have choices when it comes to where to invest and bring jobs and opportunity.', 'We have worked tirelessly on behalf of our constituents to bring good-paying jobs to our states.', 'These jobs have become part of the fabric of the automotive manufacturing industry,” the statementsaid.', 'In a statement Friday, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey said that “automotive manufacturing is one of Alabama’s crown jewel industries” and that the state is “committed to keeping it that way.”', '“The workers in Vance have spoken, and they have spoken clearly!', 'Alabama is not Michigan, and we are not the Sweet Home to the UAW,” Ivey said in the statement.', 'Mercedes allegedly pushed back against unionization efforts in other ways, according to the UAW.', 'The National Labor Relations Board said it is investigating six unfair labor practice allegations filed by the UAW against Mercedes-Benz since March.', 'Those accusations from the UAW allege Mercedes disciplined employees for discussing unionization during work, prohibited distribution of union materials, surveilled employees, and forced employees to attend “captive audience meetings,” which is a mandatory meeting during work hours meant to discourage unionizing.', 'Mercedes-Benz US International denied these claims, and said in a statement it “has not interfered with or retaliated against any Team Member in their right to pursue union representation.”', 'It continued, “We do not believe these claims have merit and we look forward to presenting our case to the NLRB.”', 'The UAWsaid it began an effort to organize workers at 13 non-union auto US factories in November 2023.', 'The effort included three US-based electric vehicle makers — Tesla, Rivian and Lucid — as well as 10 foreign automakers that build cars in the US — BMW, Honda, Hyundai, Mazda, Mercedes, Nissan, Subaru, Toyota, Volkswagen, and Volvo.', 'The South has been an attractive region for foreign automakers to open plants because of generous tax breaks and cheaper, non-union labor that generally doesn’t receive the wages or benefits won by unionized workers.', 'But last month, hourly workers at Volkswagen’s plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, overwhelmingly voted to join the UAW — 73% of the 3,600 workers at the plant who cast ballots had voted to join the union.', 'The Chattanooga victory didn’t come easy for the UAW.', 'Volkswagen didn’t win until its third union drive, said Art Wheaton, director of labor studies atCornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations’ Buffalo office.', 'This was the Mercedes plant’s first strong push, and labor experts say a loss at Mercedes isn’t the end of the push to organize the South.', '“It’s not a catastrophe if they don’t win (the first time).', 'Primarily because they’re facing a very active Mercedes Benz trying to block them from organizing, you got governors in the South trying to block them from organizing, and they don’t have the same track record or history or infrastructure in Alabama,” Wheaton said to CNN earlier this week.', 'In a press conference Friday, Fain said the difference between Mercedes and Volkswagen was that “Volkswagen was more neutral.”', '“Until we can have an absolute, neutral, free and fair election… This is the fight we have to take on,” Fain said.', 'There are about 150,000 workers at nonunion auto plants in the United States today.', 'That’s roughly the same amount of workers represented at the Big Three.', 'Since 1990, the South’s share of auto jobs has doubled from around 15% to 30% today, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.', 'Meanwhile, the Midwest’s share has declined from 60% to 45%.', '“It’s not horrible if they lose, because it gives the UAWthe chance to see where they’re at.', 'They can gauge how much support they have,” Wheaton said.', 'This story has been updated with additional developments and context.', '- CNN’s Chris Isidore and Nathaniel Meyersohn contributed to this report.']",0.2225766872777374,"The South has been an attractive region for foreign automakers to open plants because of generous tax breaks and cheaper, non-union labor that generally doesn’t receive the wages or benefits won by unionized workers.","Those accusations from the UAW allege Mercedes disciplined employees for discussing unionization during work, prohibited distribution of union materials, surveilled employees, and forced employees to attend “captive audience meetings,” which is a mandatory meeting during work hours meant to discourage unionizing.",0.5178182306496993,"Since 1990, the South’s share of auto jobs has doubled from around 15% to 30% today, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.","Meanwhile, the Midwest’s share has declined from 60% to 45%.",2024-05-20 AI 'godfather' says universal basic income will be needed,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cnd607ekl99o,2024-05-18T13:18:15.919Z,"The computer scientist regarded as the “godfather of artificial intelligence” says the government will have to establish a universal basic income to deal with the impact of AI on inequality. Professor Geoffrey Hinton told BBC Newsnight that a benefits reform giving fixed amounts of cash to every citizen would be needed because he was “very worried about AI taking lots of mundane jobs”. “I was consulted by people in Downing Street and I advised them that universal basic income was a good idea,” he said. He said while he felt AI would increase productivity and wealth, the money would go to the rich “and not the people whose jobs get lost and that’s going to be very bad for society”. Professor Hinton is the pioneer of neural networks, which form the theoretical basis of the current explosion in artificial intelligence. Until last year he worked at Google, but left the tech giant so he could talk more freely about the dangers from unregulated AI. The concept of a universal basic income amounts to the government paying all individuals a set salary regardless of their means. Critics say it would be extremely costly and divert funding away from public services, while not necessarily helping to alleviate poverty. A government spokesman said there were ""no plans to introduce a universal basic income"". Professor Hinton reiterated his concern that there were human extinction-level threats emerging. Developments over the last year showed governments were unwilling to rein in military use of AI, he said, while the competition to develop products rapidly meant there was a risk tech companies wouldn't “put enough effort into safety”. Professor Hinton said ""my guess is in between five and 20 years from now there’s a probability of half that we’ll have to confront the problem of AI trying to take over"". This would lead to an “extinction-level threat” for humans because we could have “created a form of intelligence that is just better than biological intelligence… That's very worrying for us”. AI could “evolve”, he said, “to get the motivation to make more of itself” and could autonomously “develop a sub-goal of getting control”. He said there was already evidence of large language models - a type of AI algorithm used to generate text - choosing to be deceptive. He said recent applications of AI to generate thousands of military targets were the “thin end of the wedge”. “What I’m most concerned about is when these can autonomously make the decision to kill people,"" he said. Professor Hinton said something similar to the Geneva Conventions - the international treaties that establish legal standards for humanitarian treatment in war - may be needed to regulate the military use of AI. ""But I don't think that's going to happen until after very nasty things have happened,” he added. Asked if the West was in a Manhattan Project-style race - referring to nuclear weapons research during World War Two - with autocracies such as Russia and China on the military use of AI, Professor Hinton replied: “[Russian President Vladimir] Putin said some years ago that whoever controls AI controls the world. So I imagine they're working very hard. ""Fortunately, the West is probably well ahead of them in research. We're probably still slightly ahead of China. But China's putting more resources in. And so in terms of military uses I think there's going to be a race”. He said a better solution would be a prohibition on military uses of AI. ",BBC,18/05/2024,"['The computer scientist regarded as the “godfather of artificial intelligence” says the government will have to establish a universal basic income to deal with the impact of AI on inequality.', 'Professor Geoffrey Hinton told BBC Newsnight that a benefits reform giving fixed amounts of cash to every citizen would be needed because he was “very worried about AI taking lots of mundane jobs”. “', 'I was consulted by people in Downing Street and I advised them that universal basic income was a good idea,” he said.', 'He said while he felt AI would increase productivity and wealth, the money would go to the rich “and not the people whose jobs get lost and that’s going to be very bad for society”.', 'Professor Hinton is the pioneer of neural networks, which form the theoretical basis of the current explosion in artificial intelligence.', 'Until last year he worked at Google, but left the tech giant so he could talk more freely about the dangers from unregulated AI.', 'The concept of a universal basic income amounts to the government paying all individuals a set salary regardless of their means.', 'Critics say it would be extremely costly and divert funding away from public services, while not necessarily helping to alleviate poverty.', 'A government spokesman said there were ""no plans to introduce a universal basic income"".', 'Professor Hinton reiterated his concern that there were human extinction-level threats emerging.', ""Developments over the last year showed governments were unwilling to rein in military use of AI, he said, while the competition to develop products rapidly meant there was a risk tech companies wouldn't “put enough effort into safety”."", 'Professor Hinton said ""my guess is in between five and 20 years from now there’s a probability of half that we’ll have to confront the problem of AI trying to take over"".', ""This would lead to an “extinction-level threat” for humans because we could have “created a form of intelligence that is just better than biological intelligence… That's very worrying for us”."", 'AI could “evolve”, he said, “to get the motivation to make more of itself” and could autonomously “develop a sub-goal of getting control”.', 'He said there was already evidence of large language models - a type of AI algorithm used to generate text - choosing to be deceptive.', 'He said recent applications of AI to generate thousands of military targets were the “thin end of the wedge”. “', 'What I’m most concerned about is when these can autonomously make the decision to kill people,"" he said.', 'Professor Hinton said something similar to the Geneva Conventions - the international treaties that establish legal standards for humanitarian treatment in war - may be needed to regulate the military use of AI. ""', ""But I don't think that's going to happen until after very nasty things have happened,” he added."", 'Asked if the West was in a Manhattan Project-style race - referring to nuclear weapons research during World War Two - with autocracies such as Russia and China on the military use of AI, Professor Hinton replied: “[Russian President Vladimir] Putin said some years ago that whoever controls AI controls the world.', 'So I imagine they\'re working very hard. ""', 'Fortunately, the West is probably well ahead of them in research.', ""We're probably still slightly ahead of China."", ""But China's putting more resources in."", ""And so in terms of military uses I think there's going to be a race”."", 'He said a better solution would be a prohibition on military uses of AI.']",-0.027017192741244,He said a better solution would be a prohibition on military uses of AI.,"Critics say it would be extremely costly and divert funding away from public services, while not necessarily helping to alleviate poverty.",0.1888855174183845,"He said while he felt AI would increase productivity and wealth, the money would go to the rich “and not the people whose jobs get lost and that’s going to be very bad for society”.","Developments over the last year showed governments were unwilling to rein in military use of AI, he said, while the competition to develop products rapidly meant there was a risk tech companies wouldn't “put enough effort into safety”.",2024-05-20 Your ultimate guide to the American Express Membership Rewards program,https://edition.cnn.com/cnn-underscored/travel/american-express-membership-rewards-guide," Updated 1:03 PM EDT, Mon April 1, 2024 ","American Express Membership Rewards® are among the most valuable travel rewards points out there. That’s primarily because they fall into the category of “transferable rewards,” meaning you’re not tied down to a single airline or hotel program with which you can redeem them. In other words, you’re not just earning points that can transfer to Delta SkyMiles, but they can also transfer to any of the other 16 airlines in the Membership Rewards portfolio. Having Membership Rewards points gives you options, and that’s always a good thing. If you’re ready to give your rewards portfolio a boost, here’s everything you need to know about earning and redeeming Amex Membership Rewards. You can earn Membership Rewards points in various ways. Some require little effort, while others involve a heavier lift. It’s a good idea to take advantage of all the options out there in order to maximize your earnings. Here’s a look at how to earn Membership Rewards most efficiently. The primary way to earn Amex points is through credit cards that earn Membership Rewards. Amex has an extensive lineup of personal and business cards offering generous welcome bonuses and recurring benefits to help you earn maximum points. These include well-known cards like The Platinum Card® from American Express and the American Express® Gold Card. With a single welcome bonus offer, you can give a pretty substantial boost to your Membership Rewards points balance. Here’s a look at the current welcome bonus offers on personal credit cards that earn Membership Rewards. Keep in mind, too, that many of these cards carry an annual fee: All information about the Amex EveryDay Credit Card, Amex EveryDay Preferred Credit Card and the American Express Green Card has been collected independently by CNN Underscored. Similarly, American Express offers a suite of business credit cards. All information about the Business Green Rewards Card from American Express has been collected independently by CNN Underscored. Keep in mind that several of these cards also carry an annual fee: Beyond the welcome bonus offers available, American Express makes it easy to earn Membership Rewards through category bonuses. If you spend a lot on groceries, it may be worth considering the Amex Gold card to earn 4 points per dollar spent at US supermarkets (on up to $25,000 in purchases per year). If you travel often, the Amex Platinum card is a great option for earning 5 points per dollar spent on eligible bookings made directly with an airline or with Amex Travel. Plus, you’ll have access to airport lounges, like American Express Centurion Lounges and Delta Sky Clubs, among others. When applying for American Express cards, be sure to take note of the application rules. For example, you can’t earn an Amex welcome bonus more than once (with a few exceptions), and you generally won’t be approved for more than two cards every 90 days. Before applying for a credit card, it’s important to do your research. As mentioned before, American Express makes it manageable to earn bonus points long after the welcome bonus offer. One of those ways is by adding an authorized user to your Amex card, which will occasionally earn you bonus points. Aside from the special promotions where Amex will offer you bonus points for adding an authorized user, doing so can also help you double up your point earnings. That’s because you’ll not only earn points per dollar spent on your purchases, but you’ll also earn rewards on the authorized user’s purchases. Of course, you’ll only want to consider adding a member of your household or someone you trust to pay you back as an authorized user on your account. Authorized users can make charges on the credit card they’ve been added to but have no liability when it comes to paying the bill — that onus falls on you, the primary card holder. Choose carefully who you add to your account, and you can earn extra Amex points without lifting a finger. If you’ve picked up an American Express credit card, earned the welcome bonus offer and think others would enjoy doing the same, you can get rewarded for spreading the word to family and friends. American Express offers bonuses to current card holders when you refer someone and they are approved for an eligible card. You can earn up to 20,000 points per successful approval, though the exact bonus varies by card. To find out your card’s current referral bonus, head over to the Amex referral site. You’ll see referral bonuses based on your card. Simply enter your friend’s name and email address for each card you want to refer and they’ll get an email, inviting them to apply for the card. You can also copy the referral link on the page and share that with your friends and family directly. Referrals are a lucrative way to earn Amex Membership Rewards points for recommending credit cards to your friends and family. Keep in mind there is a limit to how many friends you can refer in a year. Booking travel with American Express is rewarding, too — you can earn bonus points on your credit card, plus you can often get additional perks and rewards. For example, with the Amex Platinum, you’ll get 5 points per dollar spent on hotels booked through Amex Travel. As an added incentive, you’ll receive perks like free breakfast for two, room upgrades when available and hotel credits to use at the spa or onsite restaurant just by booking with Fine Hotels & Resorts or the Hotel Collection. In general, booking travel through American Express pays off in more ways than one. Card holders can also utilize one of the most underrated benefits of having an Amex card: Amex Offers. With Amex Offers, card holders can earn statement credits or bonus points at select retailers. In other words, it’s the perfect opportunity to save some cash or earn bonus points for purchases you were already planning on making. To find and take advantage of Amex Offers, you’ll need to log in to your account. From there, scroll to the bottom of the page to the Amex Offers & Benefits section of the page. Be sure to click “View All” to load all of your eligible offers, and also be sure to select “Add to Card” in order to activate your Amex Offer. From there, you’ll be eligible to earn the bonus points or cash savings that come as part of each Amex Offer — so long as you use the registered card to make your purchase. Amex Offers are a massive perk of Amex cards that can save you money or earn you bonus points on purchases you were already planning to make. Thanks to a partnership with American Express, you can turn your Rakuten cash back rewards into Membership Rewards. It’s a great way to earn Membership Rewards points on regular purchases, without much added effort. If you already have a Rakuten account, you can easily switch your earning preference to Membership Rewards. Simply log into your account and follow these steps: After this, rewards get transferred to your Membership Rewards account quarterly. Now, for the fun part! Once you’ve earned Membership Rewards points, it’s time to put them to good use. Amex gives you several options to redeem points, but the best option is travel. You can choose between statement credits for travel bookings or transferring them to airline or hotel partners. Here’s a closer look at your options and how they work. American Express has 20 airline and hotel transfer partners — in other words, the Amex points you’ve earned can be transferred to any of the 20 hotel and airline partners. The best way to redeem Membership Rewards for maximum value is through airline transfers. But keep in mind that not all airline loyalty programs are equal. Ultimately, you’ll want to research which program will offer you the most in return, depending on what your travel plans are. With each of the partners, you’ll need to link your accounts, and you’ll also need to search for award availability with the airline of your choice before transferring any points. If you’re looking to transfer your Amex Membership Rewards points, these are the 20 airline and hotel partner options, as well as the transfer rate. It’s worth noting that Amex occasionally runs transfer promotions for certain airlines or hotels. So, at times, you can get more points in return than the standard transfer rate listed above. Bonuses like these can increase the value of your points by enabling you to book sought-after award tickets for substantially less. By transferring Amex Membership Rewards points to partner airlines, you unlock the ability to travel for next to nothing — in most cases when redeeming points and miles, you’ll just have to pay the taxes and fees on a ticket. As a result, points and miles open up the door for flying experiences that would otherwise be out of reach. Keep in mind that the most obvious airline choice may not always be your best option. Airlines typically have extensive alliance networks, allowing you to redeem points for partner airlines through their respective programs. For example, British Airways and American Airlines are both members of the Oneworld alliance, meaning you can transfer your Amex Membership Rewards points to British Airways Executive Club and redeem for flights operated by American Airlines. Because of the vast number of airline transfer partners, your options are virtually endless for where your Membership Rewards points can take you. But, some redemptions are better than others — particularly when it comes to award sweet spots. Some examples of these sweet spot awards using your Amex Membership Rewards points include the following: Generally speaking, you’ll get the most value out of your Amex Membership Rewards points by transferring them to airline partners. But that may not always make sense for all card holders — and it’s not your only option. If figuring out transfer partner options and award charts sounds daunting, you can also use your Membership Rewards for fixed redemptions. This includes using points for statement credits, travel bookings via Amex Travel, charitable donations, online shopping and gift cards. Using points for statement credits toward qualifying purchases isn’t a great use of your points because you’ll only get 0.6 cents per point in value. If you’re looking to maximize the value of your Amex points, this isn’t the best route to take. You’ll get slightly more value by redeeming your Membership Rewards for travel bookings. By doing so, you’ll get 1 cent per point toward airfare and 0.7 cents per point toward car rentals, hotels, cruises and vacation bookings. Business Platinum card holders also get a 35% rebate when redeeming points for flight bookings through Amex Travel. If you choose to redeem your points for gift cards, you’ll get 1 cent per point in value. However, if you use Pay With Points (valid with Amazon, Best Buy, Boxed, Dell and GrubHub and others), you’ll get a value of just 0.5 cents to 1 cent each (depending on the Amex card) — one of the lowest-value options out there. Generally speaking, you should try to extract as much value as possible out of your Amex Membership Rewards points. However, that’s not always the case for everyone. You may want to save a few dollars here or there on a purchase you’re making online. Ultimately, we love Membership Rewards points so much because you have the option to use them however you like — whether for travel, Amazon purchases, gift cards and more. When it comes to the worth of your Membership Rewards points, it ultimately comes down to how you use them. The value you can get ranges from about 0.6 cents each to about 2 cents each. Frequent flyer website The Points Guy values Amex Membership Rewards points at 2 cents apiece. Amex offers 0.6 cents per point in value when you use points for statement credits. Meanwhile, travel bookings will get you a somewhat higher 1 cent per point. The highest value comes from transferring points to airline and hotel partners, as detailed above. Convert your points to airline miles and you can get 2 cents or more in value on premium award redemptions. American Express Membership Rewards points are some of the most versatile and valuable out there. By earning them, you give yourself the option to save money on travel, buying gift cards, Amazon purchases and so much more. Ultimately, it’s the flexibility that makes having an Amex credit card so rewarding. Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Platinum card.Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Gold card.Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Business Platinum card.Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Business Gold card.Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Blue Business Plus card. Looking for a travel credit card? Find out which cards CNN Underscored Money chose as the best travel credit cards currently available.",CNN,01/04/2024,"['American Express Membership Rewards® are among the most valuable travel rewards points out there.', 'That’s primarily because they fall into the category of “transferable rewards,” meaning you’re not tied down to a single airline or hotel program with which you can redeem them.', 'In other words, you’re not just earning points that can transfer to Delta SkyMiles, but they can also transfer to any of the other 16 airlines in the Membership Rewards portfolio.', 'Having Membership Rewards points gives you options, and that’s always a good thing.', 'If you’re ready to give your rewards portfolio a boost, here’s everything you need to know about earning and redeeming Amex Membership Rewards.', 'You can earn Membership Rewards points in various ways.', 'Some require little effort, while others involve a heavier lift.', 'It’s a good idea to take advantage of all the options out there in order to maximize your earnings.', 'Here’s a look at how to earn Membership Rewards most efficiently.', 'The primary way to earn Amex points is through credit cards that earn Membership Rewards.', 'Amex has an extensive lineup of personal and business cards offering generous welcome bonuses and recurring benefits to help you earn maximum points.', 'These include well-known cards like The Platinum Card® from American Express and the American Express® Gold Card.', 'With a single welcome bonus offer, you can give a pretty substantial boost to your Membership Rewards points balance.', 'Here’s a look at the current welcome bonus offers on personal credit cards that earn Membership Rewards.', 'Keep in mind, too, that many of these cards carry an annual fee: All information about the Amex EveryDay Credit Card, Amex EveryDay Preferred Credit Card and the American Express Green Card has been collected independently by CNN Underscored.', 'Similarly, American Express offers a suite of business credit cards.', 'All information about the Business Green Rewards Card from American Express has been collected independently by CNN Underscored.', 'Keep in mind that several of these cards also carry an annual fee: Beyond the welcome bonus offers available, American Express makes it easy to earn Membership Rewards through category bonuses.', 'If you spend a lot on groceries, it may be worth considering the Amex Gold card to earn 4 points per dollar spent at US supermarkets (on up to $25,000 in purchases per year).', 'If you travel often, the Amex Platinum card is a great option for earning 5 points per dollar spent on eligible bookings made directly with an airline or with Amex Travel.', 'Plus, you’ll have access to airport lounges, like American Express Centurion Lounges and Delta Sky Clubs, among others.', 'When applying for American Express cards, be sure to take note of the application rules.', 'For example, you can’t earn an Amex welcome bonus more than once (with a few exceptions), and you generally won’t be approved for more than two cards every 90 days.', 'Before applying for a credit card, it’s important to do your research.', 'As mentioned before, American Express makes it manageable to earn bonus points long after the welcome bonus offer.', 'One of those ways is by adding an authorized user to your Amex card, which will occasionally earn you bonus points.', 'Aside from the special promotions where Amex will offer you bonus points for adding an authorized user, doing so can also help you double up your point earnings.', 'That’s because you’ll not only earn points per dollar spent on your purchases, but you’ll also earn rewards on the authorized user’s purchases.', 'Of course, you’ll only want to consider adding a member of your household or someone you trust to pay you back as an authorized user on your account.', 'Authorized users can make charges on the credit card they’ve been added to but have no liability when it comes to paying the bill — that onus falls on you, the primary card holder.', 'Choose carefully who you add to your account, and you can earn extra Amex points without lifting a finger.', 'If you’ve picked up an American Express credit card, earned the welcome bonus offer and think others would enjoy doing the same, you can get rewarded for spreading the word to family and friends.', 'American Express offers bonuses to current card holders when you refer someone and they are approved for an eligible card.', 'You can earn up to 20,000 points per successful approval, though the exact bonus varies by card.', 'To find out your card’s current referral bonus, head over to the Amex referral site.', 'You’ll see referral bonuses based on your card.', 'Simply enter your friend’s name and email address for each card you want to refer and they’ll get an email, inviting them to apply for the card.', 'You can also copy the referral link on the page and share that with your friends and family directly.', 'Referrals are a lucrative way to earn Amex Membership Rewards points for recommending credit cards to your friends and family.', 'Keep in mind there is a limit to how many friends you can refer in a year.', 'Booking travel with American Express is rewarding, too — you can earn bonus points on your credit card, plus you can often get additional perks and rewards.', 'For example, with the Amex Platinum, you’ll get 5 points per dollar spent on hotels booked through Amex Travel.', 'As an added incentive, you’ll receive perks like free breakfast for two, room upgrades when available and hotel credits to use at the spa or onsite restaurant just by booking with Fine Hotels & Resorts or the Hotel Collection.', 'In general, booking travel through American Express pays off in more ways than one.', 'Card holders can also utilize one of the most underrated benefits of having an Amex card: Amex Offers.', 'With Amex Offers, card holders can earn statement credits or bonus points at select retailers.', 'In other words, it’s the perfect opportunity to save some cash or earn bonus points for purchases you were already planning on making.', 'To find and take advantage of Amex Offers, you’ll need to log in to your account.', 'From there, scroll to the bottom of the page to the Amex Offers & Benefits section of the page.', 'Be sure to click “View All” to load all of your eligible offers, and also be sure to select “Add to Card” in order to activate your Amex Offer.', 'From there, you’ll be eligible to earn the bonus points or cash savings that come as part of each Amex Offer — so long as you use the registered card to make your purchase.', 'Amex Offers are a massive perk of Amex cards that can save you money or earn you bonus points on purchases you were already planning to make.', 'Thanks to a partnership with American Express, you can turn your Rakuten cash back rewards into Membership Rewards.', 'It’s a great way to earn Membership Rewards points on regular purchases, without much added effort.', 'If you already have a Rakuten account, you can easily switch your earning preference to Membership Rewards.', 'Simply log into your account and follow these steps: After this, rewards get transferred to your Membership Rewards account quarterly.', 'Now, for the fun part!', 'Once you’ve earned Membership Rewards points, it’s time to put them to good use.', 'Amex gives you several options to redeem points, but the best option is travel.', 'You can choose between statement credits for travel bookings or transferring them to airline or hotel partners.', 'Here’s a closer look at your options and how they work.', 'American Express has 20 airline and hotel transfer partners — in other words, the Amex points you’ve earned can be transferred to any of the 20 hotel and airline partners.', 'The best way to redeem Membership Rewards for maximum value is through airline transfers.', 'But keep in mind that not all airline loyalty programs are equal.', 'Ultimately, you’ll want to research which program will offer you the most in return, depending on what your travel plans are.', 'With each of the partners, you’ll need to link your accounts, and you’ll also need to search for award availability with the airline of your choice before transferring any points.', 'If you’re looking to transfer your Amex Membership Rewards points, these are the 20 airline and hotel partner options, as well as the transfer rate.', 'It’s worth noting that Amex occasionally runs transfer promotions for certain airlines or hotels.', 'So, at times, you can get more points in return than the standard transfer rate listed above.', 'Bonuses like these can increase the value of your points by enabling you to book sought-after award tickets for substantially less.', 'By transferring Amex Membership Rewards points to partner airlines, you unlock the ability to travel for next to nothing — in most cases when redeeming points and miles, you’ll just have to pay the taxes and fees on a ticket.', 'As a result, points and miles open up the door for flying experiences that would otherwise be out of reach.', 'Keep in mind that the most obvious airline choice may not always be your best option.', 'Airlines typically have extensive alliance networks, allowing you to redeem points for partner airlines through their respective programs.', 'For example, British Airways and American Airlines are both members of the Oneworld alliance, meaning you can transfer your Amex Membership Rewards points to British Airways Executive Club and redeem for flights operated by American Airlines.', 'Because of the vast number of airline transfer partners, your options are virtually endless for where your Membership Rewards points can take you.', 'But, some redemptions are better than others — particularly when it comes to award sweet spots.', 'Some examples of these sweet spot awards using your Amex Membership Rewards points include the following: Generally speaking, you’ll get the most value out of your Amex Membership Rewards points by transferring them to airline partners.', 'But that may not always make sense for all card holders — and it’s not your only option.', 'If figuring out transfer partner options and award charts sounds daunting, you can also use your Membership Rewards for fixed redemptions.', 'This includes using points for statement credits, travel bookings via Amex Travel, charitable donations, online shopping and gift cards.', 'Using points for statement credits toward qualifying purchases isn’t a great use of your points because you’ll only get 0.6 cents per point in value.', 'If you’re looking to maximize the value of your Amex points, this isn’t the best route to take.', 'You’ll get slightly more value by redeeming your Membership Rewards for travel bookings.', 'By doing so, you’ll get 1 cent per point toward airfare and 0.7 cents per point toward car rentals, hotels, cruises and vacation bookings.', 'Business Platinum card holders also get a 35% rebate when redeeming points for flight bookings through Amex Travel.', 'If you choose to redeem your points for gift cards, you’ll get 1 cent per point in value.', 'However, if you use Pay With Points (valid with Amazon, Best Buy, Boxed, Dell and GrubHub and others), you’ll get a value of just 0.5 cents to 1 cent each (depending on the Amex card) — one of the lowest-value options out there.', 'Generally speaking, you should try to extract as much value as possible out of your Amex Membership Rewards points.', 'However, that’s not always the case for everyone.', 'You may want to save a few dollars here or there on a purchase you’re making online.', 'Ultimately, we love Membership Rewards points so much because you have the option to use them however you like — whether for travel, Amazon purchases, gift cards and more.', 'When it comes to the worth of your Membership Rewards points, it ultimately comes down to how you use them.', 'The value you can get ranges from about 0.6 cents each to about 2 cents each.', 'Frequent flyer website The Points Guy values Amex Membership Rewards points at 2 cents apiece.', 'Amex offers 0.6 cents per point in value when you use points for statement credits.', 'Meanwhile, travel bookings will get you a somewhat higher 1 cent per point.', 'The highest value comes from transferring points to airline and hotel partners, as detailed above.', 'Convert your points to airline miles and you can get 2 cents or more in value on premium award redemptions.', 'American Express Membership Rewards points are some of the most versatile and valuable out there.', 'By earning them, you give yourself the option to save money on travel, buying gift cards, Amazon purchases and so much more.', 'Ultimately, it’s the flexibility that makes having an Amex credit card so rewarding.', 'Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Platinum card.', 'Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Gold card.', 'Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Business Platinum card.', 'Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Business Gold card.', 'Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Blue Business Plus card.', 'Looking for a travel credit card?', 'Find out which cardsCNN Underscored Moneychose as thebest travel credit cardscurrently available.']",0.5246481979610982,"If you’ve picked up an American Express credit card, earned the welcome bonus offer and think others would enjoy doing the same, you can get rewarded for spreading the word to family and friends.",But keep in mind that not all airline loyalty programs are equal.,0.9622429311275482,"With a single welcome bonus offer, you can give a pretty substantial boost to your Membership Rewards points balance.",,2024-05-20 How can countries deal with falling birth rates?,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c72p2vgd21no,2024-05-20T01:28:50.337Z,"The first thing you need to know about the so-called demographic timebomb facing countries such as the UK and US is to never call it that. With birth rates continuing to decline in both nations, it is tempting to use the timebomb term. However, it is greatly disliked by demographers, the experts that study population change. “Number one, I hate the phrase,” says Sarah Harper, professor of gerontology (the study of the impact of aging) at the University of Oxford. “I do not think there is a demographic timebomb, it is part of the demographic transition. We knew this was going to happen, and happen across the 21st Century. So, it is not unexpected, and we should have been preparing for this for some time.” However, the scale of the future problem is immense. For a country in the developed world to increase or maintain its population it needs a birth rate of 2.1 children per woman on average. This is known as the “replacement rate”. Yet the latest figures for England and Wales show that the average birth rate, also called the total fertility rate, declined to 1.49 children per woman in 2022, from 1.55 in 2021. The rate has been falling since 2010. It is a similar picture in Scotland and Northern Ireland, which record their data separately. Meanwhile, in the US the fertility rate fell last year to 1.62, a record low. Back in 1960 it was 3.65. “In fact, two thirds of the world’s countries now have childbirth rates below the replacement rate,” adds Prof Harper. “Japan is low, China is low, South Korea is the lowest in the world.” Population growth is really only limited to sub-Saharan Africa these days. But why the concern about falling birth rates? The economic problems they can cause are significant, as countries face the impact of both aging and declining populations, and a smaller workforce in relation to the number of pensioners. For example – where will a nation’s economic growth come from if companies cannot recruit enough workers? And how can a smaller workforce afford to pay for the pensions of a much larger retired population? Those are questions that make government economists wince. To try to increase birth rates, countries can make it easier for women to have children, by providing more generous childcare provision, such as tax breaks and extended, fully-paid maternity leave. In addition, companies could be compelled to offer new mums and dads more flexible working hours, and provide workplace creches. However, while such policies might slow the decline, they rarely reverse it. Put simply, the more women are educated, the more they work and save, the better their lives are. Many women would instead prefer not to take the hit to their earnings and career prospects that becoming a mother often causes. So they have fewer children, or none at all. There are basically two main ways in which a country can deal with a falling birth rate – you can keep your population heathier and employed for longer, or you can have large-scale immigration. Singapore is one of the fastest-ageing countries in the world, and it is going for the first option. “There is a lot of effort being put into raising the retirement age, training in middle life, and encouraging companies - which have to offer you re-employment up to the age of 69 - to hire older workers,” says Prof Angelique Chan. She is the inaugural executive director of Singapore’s Centre for Ageing Research & Education. By re-employment, Prof Chan means elderly workers being able to stay in work after they have reached retirement age, if they so wish. Currently the retirement age in Singapore is 63, but this is due to rise to 64 in 2026, and to 65 by 2030. By that year the age to which people in re-employment can stay in work is expected to have risen to 70. Prof Chan says that the Singaporean government is also increasing efforts to ensure that every citizen has a doctor “who must take care of you and monitor your condition, and make sure we have heathier cohorts who can continue to work”. She adds that Singapore is spending a huge amount of money “so we have the healthiest kind of population, giving people the opportunity to work [in their old age]”. In the US, Ronald Lee, emeritus professor of economics at the University of California, says that a growing number of elderly Americans are having to work to cover their living expenses. “If we look at the proportion of consumption of 65-year-olds and older in the USA that is funded by continuing to work, it is significantly higher than in other developed countries,” he says. Prof Lee adds that this is not a bad thing. “I think it is fundamental for the whole world, to get over the idea that older people are entitled to an indefinitely long period of leisure at the end of their life. “People are healthier, vigorous, cognitively sharper, and ready to go on at much older ages than used to be the case. I hope to see retirement ages rising well into the 70’s.” Currently, Americans only get a full social security pension from 66 years and two months. But that will gradually rise to 67. Prof Lee’s thoughts may not be very popular with many people, but economically it looks inevitable. As life expectancy increases it becomes increasingly difficult to afford ever longer retirements. Something has to give, and working longer is the obvious solution. There is, however, another answer to this problem, as Prof Harper makes clear - increased immigration. Yet this is obviously a hot political potato on both sides of the Atlantic. “Migration could easily solve the problem of lower birth rates from a demographic point of view,” she says. “There are political and policy issues, but demographically what we should be doing is allowing those countries with huge child-bearing rates, and with huge numbers of workers for maybe the next four decades, to be able to flow across the world and make up the slack.” We all know there are huge pressures against large-scale immigration, although even populist regimes often turn a blind eye to it when necessary. Elizabeth Kuiper, associate director of the European Policy Centre think tank, says Hungary is a case in point. Its government claims to have a zero-tolerance attitude to migrants, but “we know that while these countries will not admit it publicly, in sectors like care and health care they have developed unspoken strategies for selective migration”. The problem is, of course, that in most of the developed world immigration is nowhere near the level necessary to make up for an aging population, and yet it is already deeply unpopular. The demographic experts know something has to give – countries will need to make people work longer, or increase immigration, and probably both. But to do that needs political consensus, and politicians know that asking people to approve additional immigration, and the need to work for more years in later life, is not a vote winner. Have the wheels come off for Tesla? The rise of Sweden's super rich Why US economy is powering ahead of Europe's How Chinese firms are using Mexico as a backdoor to the US Ibiza locals living in cars as party island sees rents soar ",BBC,20/05/2024,"['The first thing you need to know about the so-called demographic timebomb facing countries such as the UK and US is to never call it that.', 'With birth rates continuing to decline in both nations, it is tempting to use the timebomb term.', 'However, it is greatly disliked by demographers, the experts that study population change. “', 'Number one, I hate the phrase,” says Sarah Harper, professor of gerontology (the study of the impact of aging) at the University of Oxford. “', 'I do not think there is a demographic timebomb, it is part of the demographic transition.', 'We knew this was going to happen, and happen across the 21st Century.', 'So, it is not unexpected, and we should have been preparing for this for some time.”', 'However, the scale of the future problem is immense.', 'For a country in the developed world to increase or maintain its population it needs a birth rate of 2.1 children per woman on average.', 'This is known as the “replacement rate”.', 'Yet the latest figures for England and Wales show that the average birth rate, also called the total fertility rate, declined to 1.49 children per woman in 2022, from 1.55 in 2021.', 'The rate has been falling since 2010.', 'It is a similar picture in Scotland and Northern Ireland, which record their data separately.', 'Meanwhile, in the US the fertility rate fell last year to 1.62, a record low.', 'Back in 1960 it was 3.65. “', 'In fact, two thirds of the world’s countries now have childbirth rates below the replacement rate,” adds Prof Harper. “', 'Japan is low, China is low, South Korea is the lowest in the world.”', 'Population growth is really only limited to sub-Saharan Africa these days.', 'But why the concern about falling birth rates?', 'The economic problems they can cause are significant, as countries face the impact of both aging and declining populations, and a smaller workforce in relation to the number of pensioners.', 'For example – where will a nation’s economic growth come from if companies cannot recruit enough workers?', 'And how can a smaller workforce afford to pay for the pensions of a much larger retired population?', 'Those are questions that make government economists wince.', 'To try to increase birth rates, countries can make it easier for women to have children, by providing more generous childcare provision, such as tax breaks and extended, fully-paid maternity leave.', 'In addition, companies could be compelled to offer new mums and dads more flexible working hours, and provide workplace creches.', 'However, while such policies might slow the decline, they rarely reverse it.', 'Put simply, the more women are educated, the more they work and save, the better their lives are.', 'Many women would instead prefer not to take the hit to their earnings and career prospects that becoming a mother often causes.', 'So they have fewer children, or none at all.', 'There are basically two main ways in which a country can deal with a falling birth rate – you can keep your population heathier and employed for longer, or you can have large-scale immigration.', 'Singapore is one of the fastest-ageing countries in the world, and it is going for the first option. “', 'There is a lot of effort being put into raising the retirement age, training in middle life, and encouraging companies - which have to offer you re-employment up to the age of 69 - to hire older workers,” says Prof Angelique Chan.', 'She is the inaugural executive director of Singapore’s Centre for Ageing Research & Education.', 'By re-employment, Prof Chan means elderly workers being able to stay in work after they have reached retirement age, if they so wish.', 'Currently the retirement age in Singapore is 63, but this is due to rise to 64 in 2026, and to 65 by 2030.', 'By that year the age to which people in re-employment can stay in work is expected to have risen to 70.', 'Prof Chan says that the Singaporean government is also increasing efforts to ensure that every citizen has a doctor “who must take care of you and monitor your condition, and make sure we have heathier cohorts who can continue to work”.', 'She adds that Singapore is spending a huge amount of money “so we have the healthiest kind of population, giving people the opportunity to work [in their old age]”.', 'In the US, Ronald Lee, emeritus professor of economics at the University of California, says that a growing number of elderly Americans are having to work to cover their living expenses. “', 'If we look at the proportion of consumption of 65-year-olds and older in the USA that is funded by continuing to work, it is significantly higher than in other developed countries,” he says.', 'Prof Lee adds that this is not a bad thing. “', 'I think it is fundamental for the whole world, to get over the idea that older people are entitled to an indefinitely long period of leisure at the end of their life. “', 'People are healthier, vigorous, cognitively sharper, and ready to go on at much older ages than used to be the case.', 'I hope to see retirement ages rising well into the 70’s.”', 'Currently, Americans only get a full social security pension from 66 years and two months.', 'But that will gradually rise to 67.', 'Prof Lee’s thoughts may not be very popular with many people, but economically it looks inevitable.', 'As life expectancy increases it becomes increasingly difficult to afford ever longer retirements.', 'Something has to give, and working longer is the obvious solution.', 'There is, however, another answer to this problem, as Prof Harper makes clear - increased immigration.', 'Yet this is obviously a hot political potato on both sides of the Atlantic. “', 'Migration could easily solve the problem of lower birth rates from a demographic point of view,” she says. “', 'There are political and policy issues, but demographically what we should be doing is allowing those countries with huge child-bearing rates, and with huge numbers of workers for maybe the next four decades, to be able to flow across the world and make up the slack.”', 'We all know there are huge pressures against large-scale immigration, although even populist regimes often turn a blind eye to it when necessary.', 'Elizabeth Kuiper, associate director of the European Policy Centre think tank, says Hungary is a case in point.', 'Its government claims to have a zero-tolerance attitude to migrants, but “we know that while these countries will not admit it publicly, in sectors like care and health care they have developed unspoken strategies for selective migration”.', 'The problem is, of course, that in most of the developed world immigration is nowhere near the level necessary to make up for an aging population, and yet it is already deeply unpopular.', 'The demographic experts know something has to give – countries will need to make people work longer, or increase immigration, and probably both.', 'But to do that needs political consensus, and politicians know that asking people to approve additional immigration, and the need to work for more years in later life, is not a vote winner.', 'Have the wheels come off for Tesla?', ""The rise of Sweden's super rich Why US economy is powering ahead of Europe's How Chinese firms are using Mexico as a backdoor to the US Ibiza locals living in cars as party island sees rents soar""]",0.0991835909144296,"Its government claims to have a zero-tolerance attitude to migrants, but “we know that while these countries will not admit it publicly, in sectors like care and health care they have developed unspoken strategies for selective migration”.","Japan is low, China is low, South Korea is the lowest in the world.”",0.0011644137316736,By that year the age to which people in re-employment can stay in work is expected to have risen to 70.,"Meanwhile, in the US the fertility rate fell last year to 1.62, a record low.",2024-05-20 Why lab-grown diamond sales are surging,https://edition.cnn.com/2022/04/27/business/diamonds-manmade-demand/index.html," Published 7:49 AM EDT, Wed April 27, 2022 ","It’s proposal season, and engagements are on the rise. So are factory-made diamond sales. Not that you’d know the difference. Man-made diamonds look the same as naturally occurring ones. The only noticeable difference is the price tag. “The result is really stunning,” said Edahn Golan, an independent diamond industry analyst. He said March data showed the number of engagement rings sold that featured a manufactured diamond jumped 63% compared to last year, while the number of engagement rings sold with a natural diamond declined 25% in the same period. Going back by another month, to February, the data showed the number of rings sold with lab diamonds that month surged even more, to 80% compared to a year earlier while the number fell by 13% for natural diamond engagement rings. “The big fear in the natural diamonds industry is that consumers will start accepting lab-grown diamonds in engagement rings,” he said. Too late. “It’s actually happening.” Why are consumers flocking to man-made diamonds? Cost is the most obvious reason. The average retail price of the most popular one carat round man-made diamond for an engagement ring in March was $2,318, Golan said. “This is substantially less – as much as 73% cheaper – than a natural diamond of the same size, cut and clarity as the man-made diamond, which would cost $8,740,” he said. Plus, the lower cost allows couples to buy a bigger stone. “A lab diamond is a real diamond, but maybe it took a few weeks to make it,” said Golan. “Natural diamonds were formed over 800 million to three billion years and there isn’t an infinite supply of them.” This makes natural diamonds quite a bit more expensive, and prices are likely to rise as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has tightened the supply chain for natural raw diamonds. The sanctions directly target Alrosa, partly owned by the Russian government, which the US government identified as the world’s largest diamond mining company, accounting for 28% of global diamond output. Man-made diamonds are also becoming popular as consumers are more aware and educated about them, said Dan Moran, a third-generation diamond expert and owner of LA-based fine jeweler Concierge Diamonds. Moran said the typical buyer of man-made diamonds is typically younger than 40 and very budget conscious. Mined diamonds have a controversial history that’s tied to the use of child labor in some African diamond mines as well as sales of illegally-traded “conflict diamonds” that fund conflict in war-torn areas. Among Millennials and Gen Z, their eco-conscious mindset and ethical concerns about natural diamond sourcing is another factor influencing their preference for non-traditional engagement rings, according to a report from wedding planning website The Knot. Although its slice is growing, the market share for man-made diamonds remains relatively small. Currently, about 7% of the specialty diamond jewelry market is represented by man-made diamonds, up from 3% in 2020, said Golan. Some major jewelry retailers are driving the effort to take man-made diamonds mainstream. In 2021, the world’s largest jewelry company, Pandora (PANDY), made a major shift by announcing it would stop using mined diamonds and would swap to lab-created diamonds in its jewelry. Pandora said it’s instituting the change as part of an effort to sell sustainable jewelry, and also because consumers increasingly are asking for it. Signet, (SIG) the largest jewelry company in the United States (which owns Zales, Kay Jewelers and Jared chains) called out the popularity of lab diamond jewelry in its March earnings call with analysts. Calling it a “fast-growing category” in its jewelry portfolio, Signet CEO Virginia Drosos told analysts that lab-created diamonds are among the big jewelry trends she expects this year. The company said it has expanded its man-made bridal jewelry selection in both its Zales and Kay Jewelers stores in response to the increased demand. Fine jewelry brand Charles and Colvard, which makes lab-created diamonds, said consumers don’t just want to look good with the jewelry they are wearing, they also want to feel good about it. “As the momentum for conscious consumerism grows, the surge towards lab grown diamonds isn’t surprising,” said Don O’Connell, president and CEO of Charles & Colvard. “[Consumers] want to know the origins of their stones and be reassured they’re conflict-free. They’re embracing the choice to purchase a piece of fine jewelry that aligns with their values.” Lab-grown diamond brand VRAI said the pandemic, too, has sparked attention and action toward social and environmental issues. It said consumers are being more thoughtful and reassessing their purchasing habits, as well as the companies and industries they are supporting. There is, however, one important consideration for anyone buying lab-created diamonds: Man-made diamonds have little resale value. So while you may not be able to tell a natural diamond from a factory made variety, someone with a trained eye can, said Golan. Once a stone is identified as a factory diamond, even though you paid a lot less for it, you also won’t get much for it. But the value of a ring isn’t just monetary. “As a professional in the industry, I am asked all the time by people about what I think about a ring they have,” said Moran, of Concierge Jewelers. “I always say, if you love it, be happy with it. An engagement ring is a symbol of commitment and enduring love.”",CNN,27/04/2022,"['It’s proposal season, and engagements are on the rise.', 'So are factory-made diamond sales.', 'Not that you’d know the difference.', 'Man-made diamonds look the same as naturally occurring ones.', 'The only noticeable difference is the price tag.', '“The result is really stunning,” said Edahn Golan, an independent diamond industry analyst.', 'He said March data showed the number of engagement rings sold that featured a manufactured diamond jumped 63% compared to last year, while the number of engagement rings sold with a natural diamond declined 25% in the same period.', 'Going back by another month, to February, the data showed the number of rings sold with lab diamonds that month surged even more, to 80% compared to a year earlier while the number fell by 13% for natural diamond engagement rings.', '“The big fear in the natural diamonds industry is that consumers will start accepting lab-grown diamonds in engagement rings,” he said.', 'Too late. “', 'It’s actually happening.”', 'Why are consumers flocking to man-made diamonds?', 'Cost is the most obvious reason.', 'The average retail price of the most popular one carat round man-made diamond for an engagement ring in March was $2,318, Golan said.', '“This is substantially less – as much as 73% cheaper – than a natural diamond of the same size, cut and clarity as the man-made diamond, which would cost $8,740,” he said.', 'Plus, the lower cost allows couples to buy a bigger stone.', '“A lab diamond is a real diamond, but maybe it took a few weeks to make it,” said Golan. “', 'Natural diamonds were formed over 800 million to three billion years and there isn’t an infinite supply of them.”', 'This makes natural diamonds quite a bit more expensive, and prices are likely to rise as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has tightened the supply chain for natural raw diamonds.', 'The sanctions directly target Alrosa, partly owned by the Russian government, which the US government identified as the world’s largest diamond mining company, accounting for 28% of global diamond output.', 'Man-made diamonds are also becoming popular as consumers are more aware and educated about them, said Dan Moran, a third-generation diamond expert and owner of LA-based fine jeweler Concierge Diamonds.', 'Moran said the typical buyer of man-made diamonds is typically younger than 40 and very budget conscious.', 'Mined diamonds have a controversial history that’s tied to the use of child labor in some African diamond mines as well as sales of illegally-traded “conflict diamonds” that fund conflict in war-torn areas.', 'Among Millennials and Gen Z, their eco-conscious mindset and ethical concerns about natural diamond sourcing is another factor influencing their preference for non-traditional engagement rings, according to a report from wedding planning website The Knot.', 'Although its slice is growing, the market share for man-made diamonds remains relatively small.', 'Currently, about 7% of the specialty diamond jewelry market is represented by man-made diamonds, up from 3% in 2020, said Golan.', 'Some major jewelry retailers are driving the effort to take man-made diamonds mainstream.', 'In 2021, the world’s largest jewelry company, Pandora (PANDY), made a major shift by announcing it would stop using mined diamonds and would swap to lab-created diamonds in its jewelry.', 'Pandora said it’s instituting the change as part of an effort to sell sustainable jewelry, and also because consumers increasingly are asking for it.', 'Signet, (SIG) the largest jewelry company in the United States (which owns Zales, Kay Jewelers and Jared chains) called out the popularity of lab diamond jewelry in its March earnings call with analysts.', 'Calling it a “fast-growing category” in its jewelry portfolio, Signet CEO Virginia Drosos told analysts that lab-created diamonds are among the big jewelry trends she expects this year.', 'The company said it has expanded its man-made bridal jewelry selection in both its Zales and Kay Jewelers stores in response to the increased demand.', 'Fine jewelry brand Charles and Colvard, which makes lab-created diamonds, said consumers don’t just want to look good with the jewelry they are wearing, they also want to feel good about it.', '“As the momentum for conscious consumerism grows, the surge towards lab grown diamonds isn’t surprising,” said Don O’Connell, president and CEO of Charles & Colvard. “[', 'Consumers] want to know the origins of their stones and be reassured they’re conflict-free.', 'They’re embracing the choice to purchase a piece of fine jewelry that aligns with their values.”', 'Lab-grown diamond brand VRAI said the pandemic, too, has sparked attention and action toward social and environmental issues.', 'It said consumers are being more thoughtful and reassessing their purchasing habits, as well as the companies and industries they are supporting.', 'There is, however, one important consideration for anyone buying lab-created diamonds: Man-made diamonds have little resale value.', 'So while you may not be able to tell a natural diamond from a factory made variety, someone with a trained eye can, said Golan.', 'Once a stone is identified as a factory diamond, even though you paid a lot less for it, you also won’t get much for it.', 'But the value of a ring isn’t just monetary.', '“As a professional in the industry, I am asked all the time by people about what I think about a ring they have,” said Moran, of Concierge Jewelers. “', 'I always say, if you love it, be happy with it.', 'An engagement ring is a symbol of commitment and enduring love.”']",0.3714494325159568,"He said March data showed the number of engagement rings sold that featured a manufactured diamond jumped 63% compared to last year, while the number of engagement rings sold with a natural diamond declined 25% in the same period.",Mined diamonds have a controversial history that’s tied to the use of child labor in some African diamond mines as well as sales of illegally-traded “conflict diamonds” that fund conflict in war-torn areas.,0.8542834222316742,"Currently, about 7% of the specialty diamond jewelry market is represented by man-made diamonds, up from 3% in 2020, said Golan.","This makes natural diamonds quite a bit more expensive, and prices are likely to rise as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has tightened the supply chain for natural raw diamonds.",2024-05-20 NBC News boss Cesar Conde faces backlash from his network’s anchors over ‘inexplicable’ decision to hire ex-RNC chair Ronna McDaniel,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/media/nbc-news-cesar-conde-ronna-mcdaniel-backlash/index.html," Published 8:05 AM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","Cesar Conde has a decision to make — and it’s not an especially difficult one. The NBCUniversal News Group chair is facing a torrent of backlash from his own staff after greenlighting the hire of former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel as a paid network contributor. Over the last 24 hours, the most prominent and recognizable NBC News and MSNBC personalities have voiced strong displeasure with the company’s decision to welcome McDaniel to “the team.” And they’re not doing it via anonymous comments to the press. They’re doing it on the record on NBCU’s own air. Chuck Todd broke the dam on Sunday’s “Meet the Press” with a set of candid comments about the hiring, and Rachel Maddow capped the flood of backlash Monday night with a blistering 30-minute monologue eviscerating the network’s leadership for the “inexplicable” move. Suffice to say, NBCU News Group is in unprecedented territory. Never has a network’s C-suite ever been so thoroughly flogged by its most high-profile stars in such no holds barred fashion. Saying that Conde simply has a crisis on his hands would be a contender for understatement of the year. It’s a five-alarm fire at NBCU News Group, and one of Conde’s own making. While NBC News president Rebecca Blumenstein and senior vice president of politics Carrie Budoff Brown were most directly responsible for McDaniel’s hiring, a decision that MSNBC boss Rashida Jones did not object to it at the time, the buck ultimately stops with Conde, who hold the real power at the Peacock Network. McDaniel’s hiring could not have happened without Conde’s blessing. It does not take a brilliant political mind with prescient foresight to understand that hiring McDaniel would ignite a firestorm of outrage — from both within 30 Rock and outside it. Conde, someone who ostensibly supports American democracy, should have rejected McDaniel’s hiring on the grounds that NBCU News Group could not put someone on its payroll who tried to subvert the 2020 vote. As so many of NBCU’s staffers have underscored, the objection to McDaniel is not that she is a Republican. It’s not even that she is a Donald Trump-supporting Republican. It’s that she was an active participant in the plot to overthrow the last presidential election. That is not to even mention McDaniel’s years of demonizing the press, smearing the journalists who work at NBC News and MSNBC as she sought to destroy the credibility of the organization that she ran to after being chased out of the RNC. The notion put forward by NBC that it needed to hire McDaniel to bring its viewers “an insider’s perspective on national politics and the future of the Republican Party” is absurd. If that’s the case, the network should move to hire free agents like Tucker Carlson or Candace Owens. They too have their hands on the pulse of the Republican Party. In fact, they represent much more of where the GOP stands today than McDaniel. So, using NBC’s logic, why not hire them? (Spoiler: News organizations rightfully have established basic standards for paid contributors. Asking that your employees have a commitment to democracy, to the truth, and to basic decency is not a big ask.) But even if Conde has no allegiance to basic democratic principles, which this hire calls into question, given that he is known to be a political player who cares deeply about his own image in the press, he should have been wise enough to foresee that hiring McDaniel would be an ill-conceived move. How this did not occur to Conde is unfathomable and shows a tremendous lack of judgment. Even more bizarre is Conde’s management, or lack thereof, since the controversy erupted. It was clear early on that his employees at NBC News and MSNBC did not support McDaniel’s hiring. If that was not evident on Friday, it was clear as day on Sunday after “Meet the Press.” The network’s employees were not only flabbergasted and demoralized by the move, but absolutely enraged by it. At that point, the writing should have been on the wall for Conde — as it was for every other media executive that I have spoken with over the last 24 hours. It is evident that McDaniel has no real future as an NBC analyst and the decision to bring her on as a contributor will have to be reversed. After all, which NBC or MSNBC program is going to invite her on after all of this? The only real question for Conde after the Sunday morning scolding should have been how he chose to back out of the deal in the least painful way possible. To be fully honest, I very much expected a Sunday evening announcement from NBC, one that would have earned praise from the company’s staff and quickly been swept away by the rush of Trump news Monday morning. But no such announcement came. Instead, Conde has allowed the mess to spiral absolutely out of control. MSNBC’s top stars hammered the network’s leadership throughout the day Monday over the hire. NBC News’ Guild blasted Conde, saying in a statement that under him the company had quietly laid off employees over the last month and instead chosen to “prioritize an election denier over its reporters.” The already severe crisis was allowed to blossom into one of the worst corporate public relations catastrophes in recent memory. All the while, Conde has remained silent. I asked his spokesperson, Stephen Labaton, on Monday whether the NBCU News Group boss had any comment on the situation. Does he have any regret? I didn’t get an on-the-record response. Suffice to say, however, that what Conde does moving forward will say a lot about his character and commitment to democratic values. It will also say a lot about the NBCU News Group and what type of organization it is. In her biting monologue on Monday night, however, Maddow did offer Conde a way out of this mess. “Mistakes will be made,” Maddow said.”But our resilience as a democracy is going to be recognizing when decisions are bad ones and reversing those bad decisions. Hearing legitimate criticism, responding to it, and correcting course. Not digging in. Not blaming others. Take a minute. Acknowledge that maybe it wasn’t the right call.” “It is a sign of strength, not weakness, to acknowledge when you are wrong,” Maddow added. “It is a sign of strength. And our country needs us to be strong now.”",CNN,26/03/2024,"['Cesar Conde has a decision to make — and it’s not an especially difficult one.', 'The NBCUniversal News Group chair is facing a torrent of backlash from his own staff after greenlighting the hire of former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel as a paid network contributor.', 'Over the last 24 hours, the most prominent and recognizable NBC News and MSNBC personalities have voiced strong displeasure with the company’s decision to welcome McDaniel to “the team.”', 'And they’re not doing it via anonymous comments to the press.', 'They’re doing it on the record on NBCU’s own air.', 'Chuck Todd broke the dam on Sunday’s “Meet the Press” with a set of candid comments about the hiring, and Rachel Maddow capped the flood of backlash Monday night with a blistering 30-minute monologue eviscerating the network’s leadership for the “inexplicable” move.', 'Suffice to say, NBCU News Group is in unprecedented territory.', 'Never has a network’s C-suite ever been so thoroughly flogged by its most high-profile stars in such no holds barred fashion.', 'Saying that Conde simply has a crisis on his hands would be a contender for understatement of the year.', 'It’s a five-alarm fire at NBCU News Group, and one of Conde’s own making.', 'While NBC News president Rebecca Blumenstein and senior vice president of politics Carrie Budoff Brown were most directly responsible for McDaniel’s hiring, a decision that MSNBC boss Rashida Jones did not object to it at the time, the buck ultimately stops with Conde, who hold the real power at the Peacock Network.', 'McDaniel’s hiring could not have happened without Conde’s blessing.', 'It does not take a brilliant political mind with prescient foresight to understand that hiring McDaniel would ignite a firestorm of outrage — from both within 30 Rock and outside it.', 'Conde, someone who ostensibly supports American democracy, should have rejected McDaniel’s hiring on the grounds that NBCU News Group could not put someone on its payroll who tried to subvert the 2020 vote.', 'As so many of NBCU’s staffers have underscored, the objection to McDaniel is not that she is a Republican.', 'It’s not even that she is a Donald Trump-supporting Republican.', 'It’s that she was an active participant in the plot to overthrow the last presidential election.', 'That is not to even mention McDaniel’s years of demonizing the press, smearing the journalists who work at NBC News and MSNBC as she sought to destroy the credibility of the organization that she ran to after being chased out of the RNC.', 'The notion put forward by NBC that it needed to hire McDaniel to bring its viewers “an insider’s perspective on national politics and the future of the Republican Party” is absurd.', 'If that’s the case, the network should move to hire free agents like Tucker Carlson or Candace Owens.', 'They too have their hands on the pulse of the Republican Party.', 'In fact, they represent much more of where the GOP stands today than McDaniel.', 'So, using NBC’s logic, why not hire them? (', 'Spoiler: News organizations rightfully have established basic standards for paid contributors.', 'Asking that your employees have a commitment to democracy, to the truth, and to basic decency is not a big ask.)', 'But even if Conde has no allegiance to basic democratic principles, which this hire calls into question, given that he is known to be a political player who cares deeply about his own image in the press, he should have been wise enough to foresee that hiring McDaniel would be an ill-conceived move.', 'How this did not occur to Conde is unfathomable and shows a tremendous lack of judgment.', 'Even more bizarre is Conde’s management, or lack thereof, since the controversy erupted.', 'It was clear early on that his employees at NBC News and MSNBC did not support McDaniel’s hiring.', 'If that was not evident on Friday, it was clear as day on Sunday after “Meet the Press.”', 'The network’s employees were not only flabbergasted and demoralized by the move, but absolutely enraged by it.', 'At that point, the writing should have been on the wall for Conde — as it was for every other media executive that I have spoken with over the last 24 hours.', 'It is evident that McDaniel has no real future as an NBC analyst and the decision to bring her on as a contributor will have to be reversed.', 'After all, which NBC or MSNBC program is going to invite her on after all of this?', 'The only real question for Conde after the Sunday morning scolding should have been how he chose to back out of the deal in the least painful way possible.', 'To be fully honest, I very much expected a Sunday evening announcement from NBC, one that would have earned praise from the company’s staff and quickly been swept away by the rush of Trump news Monday morning.', 'But no such announcement came.', 'Instead, Conde has allowed the mess to spiral absolutely out of control.', 'MSNBC’s top stars hammered the network’s leadership throughout the day Monday over the hire.', 'NBC News’ Guild blasted Conde, saying in a statement that under him the company had quietly laid off employees over the last month and instead chosen to “prioritize an election denier over its reporters.”', 'The already severe crisis was allowed to blossom into one of the worst corporate public relations catastrophes in recent memory.', 'All the while, Conde has remained silent.', 'I asked his spokesperson, Stephen Labaton, on Monday whether the NBCU News Group boss had any comment on the situation.', 'Does he have any regret?', 'I didn’t get an on-the-record response.', 'Suffice to say, however, that what Conde does moving forward will say a lot about his character and commitment to democratic values.', 'It will also say a lot about the NBCU News Group and what type of organization it is.', 'In her biting monologue on Monday night, however, Maddow did offer Conde a way out of this mess.', '“Mistakes will be made,” Maddow said.', '”But our resilience as a democracy is going to be recognizing when decisions are bad ones and reversing those bad decisions.', 'Hearing legitimate criticism, responding to it, and correcting course.', 'Not digging in.', 'Not blaming others.', 'Take a minute.', 'Acknowledge that maybe it wasn’t the right call.”', '“It is a sign of strength, not weakness, to acknowledge when you are wrong,” Maddow added. “', 'It is a sign of strength.', 'And our country needs us to be strong now.”']",-0.032955005531589,"Over the last 24 hours, the most prominent and recognizable NBC News and MSNBC personalities have voiced strong displeasure with the company’s decision to welcome McDaniel to “the team.”",The already severe crisis was allowed to blossom into one of the worst corporate public relations catastrophes in recent memory.,-0.5018035081716684,"To be fully honest, I very much expected a Sunday evening announcement from NBC, one that would have earned praise from the company’s staff and quickly been swept away by the rush of Trump news Monday morning.","The network’s employees were not only flabbergasted and demoralized by the move, but absolutely enraged by it.",2024-05-20 Elon Musk launches SpaceX’s satellite internet service in Indonesia,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/tech/indonesia-elon-musk-starlink-launch-intl-hnk/index.html," Published 12:19 AM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","Denpasar, Indonesia — Elon Musk and Indonesian Health Minister Budi Gunadi Sadikin launched SpaceX’s satellite internet service for the nation’s health sector on Sunday, aiming to improve access in remote parts of the sprawling archipelago. Musk, the billionaire head of SpaceX and Tesla (TSLA), arrived on the Indonesian resort island of Bali by private jet before attending the launch ceremony at a community health center in the provincial capital, Denpasar. Musk, wearing a green batik shirt, said the availability of the Starlink service in Indonesia would help millions in far-flung parts of the country to access the internet. The country is home to more than 270 million people and three different time zones. “I’m very excited to bring connectivity to places that have low connectivity,” Musk said, “If you have access to the internet you can learn anything.” Starlink was launched at three Indonesian health centers on Sunday, including two in Bali and one on the remote island of Aru in Maluku. A video presentation screened at the launch showed how high internet speeds enabled the real-time input of data to better tackle health challenges such as stunting and malnutrition. Asked about whether he planned to also invest in Indonesia’s electric vehicle industry, Musk said he was focused on Starlink first. “We are focusing this event on Starlink and the benefits that connectivity brings to remote islands,” he said, “I think it’s really to emphasize the importance of internet connectivity, how much of that can be a lifesaver.” Indonesia’s government has been trying for years to lure Musk’s auto firm Tesla to build manufacturing plants related to electric vehicles as the government wants to develop its EV sector using the country’s rich nickel resources. The tech tycoon is scheduled to meet Indonesian President Joko Widodo on Monday, where he will also address the World Water Forum taking place on the island. Communications Minister Budi Arie Setiadi, who also attended the Bali launch, said Starlink was now available commercially, but the government would focus its services first for outer and underdeveloped regions. Prior to Sunday’s launch, Starlink obtained a permit to operate as an internet service provider for retail consumers and had been given the go-ahead to provide networks, having received a very small aperture terminal (VSAT) permit, Budi Setiadi told Reuters. SpaceX’s Starlink, which owns around 60% of the roughly 7,500 satellites orbiting earth, is dominant in the satellite internet sphere. Indonesia is the third country in Southeast Asia where Starlink will operate. Malaysia issued the firm a license to provide internet services last year, and a Philippine-based firm signed a deal with SpaceX in 2022. Starlink is also used extensively in Ukraine, where it is employed by the military, hospitals, businesses and aid organizations.",CNN,20/05/2024,"['Denpasar, Indonesia — ElonMuskand Indonesian Health Minister Budi Gunadi Sadikin launched SpaceX’s satellite internet service for the nation’s health sector on Sunday, aiming to improve access in remote parts of the sprawling archipelago.', 'Musk, the billionaire head of SpaceX and Tesla (TSLA), arrived on the Indonesian resort island of Bali by private jet before attending the launch ceremony at a community health center in the provincial capital, Denpasar.', 'Musk, wearing a green batik shirt,said the availability ofthe Starlink service inIndonesia would help millions in far-flung parts of the country to access the internet.', 'The country is home to more than 270 million people and three different time zones.', '“I’m very excited to bring connectivity to places that have low connectivity,”Musksaid, “If you have access to the internet you can learn anything.”', 'Starlink was launched at three Indonesian healthcenterson Sunday, including two in Bali and one on the remote island of Aru in Maluku.', 'A video presentation screened at the launch showed how high internet speeds enabled the real-time input of data to better tackle health challenges such as stunting and malnutrition.', 'Asked about whether he planned to also invest in Indonesia’s electric vehicle industry,Musksaid he was focused on Starlink first.', '“We are focusing this event on Starlink and the benefits that connectivity brings to remote islands,” he said, “I think it’s really to emphasize the importance of internet connectivity, how much of that can be a lifesaver.”', 'Indonesia’s government has been trying for years to lureMusk’s auto firm Tesla to build manufacturing plants related to electric vehicles as the government wants to develop its EV sector using the country’s rich nickel resources.', 'The tech tycoon is scheduled to meet Indonesian President Joko Widodo on Monday, where he will also address the World Water Forum taking place on the island.', 'Communications Minister Budi Arie Setiadi, who also attended the Bali launch, said Starlink was now available commercially, but the government would focus its services first for outer and underdeveloped regions.', 'Prior to Sunday’s launch, Starlinkobtained a permitto operate as an internet service provider for retail consumers and had been given the go-ahead to provide networks, having received a very small aperture terminal (VSAT) permit, BudiSetiadi toldReuters.', 'SpaceX’s Starlink, which owns around 60% of the roughly 7,500 satellites orbiting earth, is dominant in the satellite internet sphere.', 'Indonesia is the third country in Southeast Asia where Starlink will operate.', 'Malaysia issued the firm a license to provide internet services last year, and a Philippine-based firm signed a deal with SpaceX in 2022.', 'Starlink is also used extensively in Ukraine, where it is employed by the military, hospitals, businesses and aid organizations.']",0.2045370842260253,"“We are focusing this event on Starlink and the benefits that connectivity brings to remote islands,” he said, “I think it’s really to emphasize the importance of internet connectivity, how much of that can be a lifesaver.”",,0.9011718545641216,"Musk, wearing a green batik shirt,said the availability ofthe Starlink service inIndonesia would help millions in far-flung parts of the country to access the internet.",,2024-05-20 Japan’s economy contracts in first quarter,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/15/economy/japan-economy-contraction-hnk-intl/index.html," Updated 11:14 PM EDT, Wed May 15, 2024 ","Japan’s economy contracted in the first quarter, squeezed by weaker consumption and external demand and throwing a fresh challenge to policymakers as the central bank looks to lift interest rates away from near-zero levels. Preliminary gross domestic product (GDP) data from the Cabinet Office on Thursday showed Japan’s economy shrank 2.0% annualized in the January to March months from the prior quarter, faster than the 1.5% drop seen in a Reuters poll of economists. Downwardly revised data showed GDP barely grew in the fourth quarter. The reading translates into a quarterly contraction of 0.5%, versus a 0.4% decline expected by economists. Private consumption, which accounts for more than half of the Japanese economy, fell 0.7%, bigger than the forecast 0.2% drop. It was the fourth straight quarter of decline, the longest streak since 2009. “Japan’s economy hit the bottom in the first quarter,” said Yoshimasa Maruyama, chief market economist at SMBC Nikko Securities. “The economy will certainly rebound this quarter thanks to rising wages although uncertainty remains on service consumption.” Capital spending, a key driver of private demand, fell 0.8% in the first quarter, versus an expected decline of 0.7%, despite hefty corporate earnings. External demand, or exports minus imports, knocked 0.3 of a percentage point off first quarter GDP estimates. Policymakers are counting on rising wages and income tax cuts from June to help spur flagging consumption. The drag to growth from an earthquake in the Noto area this year and the suspension of operations at Toyota’s (TM) Daihatsu unit are also expected to fade. Still, a sharp decline in the yen to levels unseen since 1990 has fueled concerns about higher living costs, squeezing consumption. The Bank of Japan (BOJ) raised interest rates in March for the first time since 2007, in a landmark shift away from negative rates, but the central bank is expected to go slow in unwinding easy money conditions given a fragile economy.",CNN,15/05/2024,"['Japan’seconomycontracted in the first quarter, squeezed by weaker consumption and external demand and throwing a fresh challenge to policymakers as the central bank looks to lift interest rates away from near-zero levels.', 'Preliminary gross domestic product (GDP) data from the Cabinet Office on Thursday showedJapan’seconomyshrank 2.0% annualized in the January to March months from the prior quarter, faster than the 1.5% drop seen in a Reuters poll of economists.', 'Downwardly revised data showed GDP barely grew in the fourth quarter.', 'The reading translates into a quarterly contraction of 0.5%, versus a 0.4% decline expected by economists.', 'Private consumption, which accounts for more than half of theJapaneseeconomy, fell 0.7%, bigger than the forecast 0.2% drop.', 'It was the fourth straight quarter of decline, the longest streak since 2009.', '“Japan’seconomyhit the bottom in the first quarter,” said Yoshimasa Maruyama, chief market economist at SMBC Nikko Securities. “', 'Theeconomywill certainly rebound this quarter thanks to rising wages although uncertainty remains on service consumption.”', 'Capital spending, a key driver of private demand, fell 0.8% in the first quarter, versus an expected decline of 0.7%, despite hefty corporate earnings.', 'External demand, or exports minus imports, knocked 0.3 of a percentage point off first quarter GDP estimates.', 'Policymakers are counting on rising wages and income tax cuts from June to help spur flagging consumption.', 'The drag to growth from an earthquake in the Noto area this year and the suspension of operations at Toyota’s (TM) Daihatsu unit are also expected to fade.', 'Still, a sharp decline in the yen to levels unseen since 1990 has fueled concerns about higher living costs, squeezing consumption.', 'The Bank ofJapan(BOJ) raised interest rates in March for the first time since 2007, in a landmark shift away from negative rates, but the central bank is expected to go slow in unwinding easy money conditions given a fragileeconomy.']",0.0687892096218997,"The Bank ofJapan(BOJ) raised interest rates in March for the first time since 2007, in a landmark shift away from negative rates, but the central bank is expected to go slow in unwinding easy money conditions given a fragileeconomy.","Preliminary gross domestic product (GDP) data from the Cabinet Office on Thursday showedJapan’seconomyshrank 2.0% annualized in the January to March months from the prior quarter, faster than the 1.5% drop seen in a Reuters poll of economists.",-0.4547574434961591,Theeconomywill certainly rebound this quarter thanks to rising wages although uncertainty remains on service consumption.”,"Private consumption, which accounts for more than half of theJapaneseeconomy, fell 0.7%, bigger than the forecast 0.2% drop.",2024-05-20 From Taylor Swift tickets to gasoline — these days everyone feels like they’re being price-gouged. Are they?,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/18/business/price-gouging-explained/index.html," Published 4:00 AM EDT, Sat May 18, 2024 ","Emily Miller lucked out. Of the millions of fans — and bots — flooding Ticketmaster’s site in hopes of purchasing tickets to Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour, the 22-year-old managed to score $200 floor seats to see the mega pop star perform in Pittsburgh last summer. Now, Miller dreams of seeing Swift perform again when her tour returns to the US later this year. But despite entering 10 accounts to get a code that would give her the chance to buy tickets at face value through Ticketmaster’s presale, she was unsuccessful. On the resale market, nosebleed-seat tickets behind the stage are already listed for thousands of dollars. “People are taking advantage of fans and their vulnerability because people like me who have been fans of Taylor for so, so long would do genuinely anything just to be inside that stadium,” Miller, who is currently in an accelerated nursing degree program in Cleveland, told CNN. The resellers are price gouging the fans, she said. The term has been used a lot lately to describe so much more than just hiking gasoline prices during a hurricane. At the core of the increasingly common accusation of price gouging is the sense that the consumer is being exploited. But it’s not as cut and dry as you may think. In fact, economists — and even President Joe Biden — can’t agree on a definition of it. But there’s one thing everyone agrees on: Just about everything costs more than it used to a few years ago, a consequence of inflation. Although the pace of price increases has cooled substantially, we’re still paying more. It doesn’t help that prices can rise in seconds thanks to technology, unlike times when hikes would require, for instance, printing new menus. Consumers are taking to social media more to draw attention to times they feel like they are being ripped off. When, in effect, they may more likely be victims of inflation — or good old supply and demand. Gavin Roberts, chair of Weber State University’s economics department and who studies the effect of anti-price gouging laws, said the laws themselves often don’t define what price gouging is. Biden has been quite vocal about cracking down on price gouging, which he uses interchangeably with “corporate greed,” both of which he claims are a contributing factor to inflation. At the same time, Biden hasn’t defined what price gouging is and what it isn’t. Biden takes particular issue with instances where the cost of producing a good has gone down while the price consumers pay goes up, a White House official told CNN. But he doesn’t believe that price gouging is driving inflation or that all corporations are price gouging consumers. Corporations charging as much as they can, as painful as it may be for consumers, doesn’t mean they’re necessarily price gouging, said Roberts. In Roberts’ view, price gouging occurs when there’s a scarcity of a good or service, lack of competition and the consumer has very little information about the price they’ll be charged or doesn’t have the ability to shop around for better prices. All that could lead them to be taken advantage of. The best example of this, he said, would be someone going to the emergency room in dire need of care and months later receiving a bill for thousands of dollars. It wouldn’t, in his view, be price gouging if a situation arose during which someone had the only attainable bottle of water and auctioned it off to a crowd of people for the highest possible price. That’s because people had upfront information about how the price was set, he said. Steven Suranovic, an economics professor at George Washington University who has also published research on price gouging, sees it differently. “I define it as the use of market power to secure a higher price than what would occur with free competition,” he said. “For example, Martin Shkreli was a price gouger when he set ridiculously high prices on some pharmaceutical drugs his company controlled.” When Shkreli was CEO of the company formerly known as Turing Pharmaceuticals, the price of the lifesaving drug Daraprim used by AIDS patients was raised from $13.50 a pill to $750 a pill, in 2015, sparking a public outcry. CNN reached out to Shkreli, who was later convicted of securities fraud and conspiracy, over LinkedIn. Shkreli responded to CNN in a message on LinkedIn: “we dont talk to snitches.” Waiting to order an Uber until you make your way to the lobby of a building could cost you 20% more than the price you saw when you first opened the app. That’s the essence of the Uber business model, a practice known as dynamic pricing where there is no fixed rate for how much your ride will cost. Rather, it is tied to the supply of drivers in a given area and the demand for rides. Uber, like its main competitor Lyft, has come under scrutiny for allowing prices to surge at times when public transit is severely disrupted. In some instances, the companies suspended surge pricing temporarily. (Neither company responded to requests for comment.) Surge pricing was in full effect, though, on New Year’s Eve of 2011 when Uber experienced what was then its highest demand in New York City, causing rides to spike above $100. That invited a slew of price gouging accusations. Travis Kalanick, the CEO at the time, later penned a blog post noting, “Nobody is required to take an Uber, but having a reliable option is what we’re shooting for. It’s not about gouging.” Suranovic said surge pricing can simply be a product of “a competitive market.” But he acknowledged that sudden price increases are more likely to lead consumers to believe they’re being price gouged and “blame business for profiteering.” “Higher costs due to inflation is a cause of gradual price increases, but I wouldn’t consider that gouging,” he told CNN. Experts in pricing strategy warn that surprise increases can generate a backlash. “Price gouging is a subjective emotion of a consumer feeling that they are being taken advantage of by an unfairly high price,” said Rafi Mohammed, who founded a pricing strategy consultancy firm called Culture of Profit. “When setting a price, managers need to understand and anticipate that their prices will elicit emotional reactions ranging from ‘that’s cheap’ to ‘this is unfair.’” To avoid that, his philosophy has been to set prices in a manner that could elicit a response from customers along the lines of “Thank you! I looked around at various offerings and determined that your product and price offered me the best value.” That said, if you do believe you’re being price gouged, your state may be able to step in — as many did during the pandemic, even for goods like toilet paper, by capping prices. (Though Roberts’ research suggests some anti-price gouging laws are to blame if you couldn’t find toilet paper.) Still, Teresa Murray, director of the consumer watchdog division of US PIRG, a nonprofit consumer advocacy research group, wrote in a blog post that “if you aren’t sure whether a product is priced too high, it’s better to report problematic items to the company and your attorney general.” Perhaps state attorneys general should consider a special division dedicated to Swifties, too.",CNN,18/05/2024,"['Emily Miller lucked out.', 'Of the millions of fans — and bots — flooding Ticketmaster’s site in hopes of purchasing tickets to Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour, the 22-year-old managed to score $200 floor seats to see the mega pop star perform in Pittsburgh last summer.', 'Now, Miller dreams of seeing Swift perform again when her tour returns to the US later this year.', 'But despite entering 10 accounts to get a code that would give her the chance to buy tickets at face value through Ticketmaster’s presale, she was unsuccessful.', 'On the resale market, nosebleed-seat tickets behind the stage are already listed for thousands of dollars.', '“People are taking advantage of fans and their vulnerability because people like me who have been fans of Taylor for so, so long would do genuinely anything just to be inside that stadium,” Miller, who is currently in an accelerated nursing degree program in Cleveland, told CNN.', 'The resellers are price gouging the fans, she said.', 'The term has been used a lot lately to describe so much more than just hiking gasoline prices during a hurricane.', 'At the core of the increasingly common accusation of price gouging is the sense that the consumer is being exploited.', 'But it’s not as cut and dry as you may think.', 'In fact, economists — and even President Joe Biden — can’t agree on a definition of it.', 'But there’s one thing everyone agrees on: Just about everything costs more than it used to a few years ago, a consequence of inflation.', 'Although the pace of price increases has cooled substantially, we’re still paying more.', 'It doesn’t help that prices can rise in seconds thanks to technology, unlike times when hikes would require, for instance, printing new menus.', 'Consumers are taking to social media more to draw attention to times they feel like they are being ripped off.', 'When, in effect, they may more likely be victims of inflation — or good old supply and demand.', 'Gavin Roberts, chair of Weber State University’s economics department and who studies the effect of anti-price gouging laws, said the laws themselves often don’t define what price gouging is.', 'Biden has been quite vocal about cracking down on price gouging, which he uses interchangeably with “corporate greed,” both of which he claims are a contributing factor to inflation.', 'At the same time, Biden hasn’t defined what price gouging is and what it isn’t.', 'Biden takes particular issue with instances where the cost of producing a good has gone down while the price consumers pay goes up, a White House official told CNN.', 'But he doesn’t believe that price gouging is driving inflation or that all corporations are price gouging consumers.', 'Corporations charging as much as they can, as painful as it may be for consumers, doesn’t mean they’re necessarily price gouging, said Roberts.', 'In Roberts’ view, price gouging occurs when there’s a scarcity of a good or service, lack of competition and the consumer has very little information about the price they’ll be charged or doesn’t have the ability to shop around for better prices.', 'All that could lead them to be taken advantage of.', 'The best example of this, he said, would be someone going to the emergency room in dire need of care and months later receiving a bill for thousands of dollars.', 'It wouldn’t, in his view, be price gouging if a situation arose during which someone had the only attainable bottle of water and auctioned it off to a crowd of people for the highest possible price.', 'That’s because people had upfront information about how the price was set, he said.', 'Steven Suranovic, an economics professor at George Washington University who has also published research on price gouging, sees it differently.', '“I define it as the use of market power to secure a higher price than what would occur with free competition,” he said. “', 'For example, Martin Shkreli was a price gouger when he set ridiculously high prices on some pharmaceutical drugs his company controlled.”', 'When Shkreli was CEO of the company formerly known as Turing Pharmaceuticals, the price of the lifesaving drug Daraprim used by AIDS patients was raised from $13.50 a pill to $750 a pill, in 2015, sparking a public outcry.', 'CNN reached out to Shkreli, who was later convicted of securities fraud and conspiracy, over LinkedIn.', 'Shkreli responded to CNN in a message on LinkedIn: “we dont talk to snitches.”', 'Waiting to order an Uber until you make your way to the lobby of a building could cost you 20% more than the price you saw when you first opened the app.', 'That’s the essence of the Uber business model, a practice known as dynamic pricing where there is no fixed rate for how much your ride will cost.', 'Rather, it is tied to the supply of drivers in a given area and the demand for rides.', 'Uber, like its main competitor Lyft, has come under scrutiny for allowing prices to surge at times when public transit is severely disrupted.', 'In some instances, the companies suspended surge pricing temporarily. (', 'Neither company responded to requests for comment.)', 'Surge pricing was in full effect, though, on New Year’s Eve of 2011 when Uber experienced what was then its highest demand in New York City, causing rides to spike above $100.', 'That invited a slew of price gouging accusations.', 'Travis Kalanick, the CEO at the time, later penned a blog post noting, “Nobody is required to take an Uber, but having a reliable option is what we’re shooting for.', 'It’s not about gouging.”', 'Suranovic said surge pricing can simply be a product of “a competitive market.”', 'But he acknowledged that sudden price increases are more likely to lead consumers to believe they’re being price gouged and “blame business for profiteering.”', '“Higher costs due to inflation is a cause of gradual price increases, but I wouldn’t consider that gouging,” he told CNN.', 'Experts in pricing strategy warn that surprise increases can generate a backlash.', '“Price gouging is a subjective emotion of a consumer feeling that they are being taken advantage of by an unfairly high price,” said Rafi Mohammed, who founded a pricing strategy consultancy firm called Culture of Profit.', '“When setting a price, managers need to understand and anticipate that their prices will elicit emotional reactions ranging from ‘that’s cheap’ to ‘this is unfair.’”', 'To avoid that, his philosophy has been to set prices in a manner that could elicit a response from customers along the lines of “Thank you!', 'I looked around at various offerings and determined that your product and price offered me the best value.”', 'That said, if you do believe you’re being price gouged, your state may be able to step in — as many did during the pandemic, even for goods like toilet paper, by capping prices. (', 'Though Roberts’ research suggests some anti-price gouging laws are to blame if you couldn’t find toilet paper.)', 'Still, Teresa Murray, director of the consumer watchdog division of US PIRG, a nonprofit consumer advocacy research group, wrote in a blog post that “if you aren’t sure whether a product is priced too high, it’s better to report problematic items to the company and your attorney general.”', 'Perhaps state attorneys general should consider a special division dedicated to Swifties, too.']",0.073110648618194,I looked around at various offerings and determined that your product and price offered me the best value.”,"CNN reached out to Shkreli, who was later convicted of securities fraud and conspiracy, over LinkedIn.",0.1773521178647091,"Biden takes particular issue with instances where the cost of producing a good has gone down while the price consumers pay goes up, a White House official told CNN.",Experts in pricing strategy warn that surprise increases can generate a backlash.,2024-05-20 Record number of overseas tourists visit Scotland,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cv2rg3rjdvjo,2024-05-17T12:40:16.226Z,"Tourism bosses have described record international visitor numbers for Scotland in 2023 as a ""turning point"" for the industry. Almost four million people from overseas visited the country last year, an increase of 15% on 2019, the last year before the Covid pandemic. Unprecedented numbers from North America helped break the previous record of 3.7m, which was set in 2018. Visitors to Scotland in 2023 spent £3.6bn - up 41% on 2019 and 13% on 2022 - although those increases do not account for inflation. Scotland is the only part of the UK that has seen an increase in comparison to 2019, although the International Passenger Survey by the Office of National Statistics (ONS) found that the majority of nations and regions saw growth compared to 2022. VisitScotland's chief executive Malcolm Roughead said international tourism was ""hugely important"" to the Scottish economy. He added: ""These figures mark a turning point for tourism in Scotland, showing not only recovery but crucially growth in international visitors with number of visits and spend now above 2019 levels. Vicki Miller of VisitScotland told BBC Scotland News that the figures were a ""significant milestone"" for the tourism sector. She estimated that just under 20% of visitors to Scotland now come from international markets. She added: ""That 19% from international markets is really important in terms of spend, because they stay longer and typically spend more. It accounts for 46% of the value of tourism to Scotland."" VisitScotland's own research suggested that visitors are increasingly looking for unique experiences, such as designing tartan or bagpipe lessons, which Ms Miller said reflected a desire for ""once in a lifetime"" holidays Wellness activities, like wild swimming and food and drink trips, are also popular. The figures revealed that visitors from North America were up by 16% and from Europe by 19%. Tourists from ""other countries"", a category including Australia and China, saw the greatest spike to 2022, soaring by 53%. ",BBC,17/05/2024,"['Tourism bosses have described record international visitor numbers for Scotland in 2023 as a ""turning point"" for the industry.', 'Almost four million people from overseas visited the country last year, an increase of 15% on 2019, the last year before the Covid pandemic.', 'Unprecedented numbers from North America helped break the previous record of 3.7m, which was set in 2018.', 'Visitors to Scotland in 2023 spent £3.6bn - up 41% on 2019 and 13% on 2022 - although those increases do not account for inflation.', 'Scotland is the only part of the UK that has seen an increase in comparison to 2019, although the International Passenger Survey by the Office of National Statistics (ONS) found that the majority of nations and regions saw growth compared to 2022.', 'VisitScotland\'s chief executive Malcolm Roughead said international tourism was ""hugely important"" to the Scottish economy.', 'He added: ""These figures mark a turning point for tourism in Scotland, showing not only recovery but crucially growth in international visitors with number of visits and spend now above 2019 levels.', 'Vicki Miller of VisitScotland told BBC Scotland News that the figures were a ""significant milestone"" for the tourism sector.', 'She estimated that just under 20% of visitors to Scotland now come from international markets.', 'She added: ""That 19% from international markets is really important in terms of spend, because they stay longer and typically spend more.', 'It accounts for 46% of the value of tourism to Scotland.""', 'VisitScotland\'s own research suggested that visitors are increasingly looking for unique experiences, such as designing tartan or bagpipe lessons, which Ms Miller said reflected a desire for ""once in a lifetime"" holidays Wellness activities, like wild swimming and food and drink trips, are also popular.', 'The figures revealed that visitors from North America were up by 16% and from Europe by 19%.', 'Tourists from ""other countries"", a category including Australia and China, saw the greatest spike to 2022, soaring by 53%.']",0.2959041133654469,"VisitScotland's own research suggested that visitors are increasingly looking for unique experiences, such as designing tartan or bagpipe lessons, which Ms Miller said reflected a desire for ""once in a lifetime"" holidays Wellness activities, like wild swimming and food and drink trips, are also popular.",,0.997717104174874,Visitors to Scotland in 2023 spent £3.6bn - up 41% on 2019 and 13% on 2022 - although those increases do not account for inflation.,,2024-05-20 Red Lobster files for bankruptcy,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/20/investing/red-lobster-restaurants-bankruptcy/index.html," Updated 2:59 PM EDT, Mon May 20, 2024 ","Red Lobster, which brought affordable shrimp and lobster to middle-class America and grew to become the largest seafood restaurant chain in the world, has filed for bankruptcy. The company said it had more than $1 billion in debt and less than $30 million in cash on hand. It plans to sell its business to its lenders, and in turn, it will receive financing to stay afloat. It expects to continue to close restaurants in the meantime. Red Lobster, known for its cheddar bay biscuits, crab legs and shrimp dishes, spread around the country during the 1980s and 1990s. In 2016, Beyoncé mentioned Red Lobster in her song “Formation,” describing bringing a romantic partner to Red Lobster, causing sales to surge. With 578 restaurants across 44 states and Canada, Red Lobster serves 64 million customers a year, and it brings in $2 billion in annual sales, the company said in its bankruptcy filing. One in five lobster tails purchased in North America is bought by Red Lobster. But recent mismanagement, competition, inflation and other factors brought down Red Lobster, analysts and former Red Lobster employees say. Years of underinvestment in Red Lobster’s marketing, food quality, service and restaurant upgrades hurt the chain’s ability to compete with growing fast-casual and quick-service chains. Red Lobster started in 1968 by Bill Darden, an architect of the casual dining revolution in America, and General Mills soon bought the restaurant. Red Lobster later became part of Darden Restaurants, the owner of Olive Garden and other chains. In 2014, Darden sold off Red Lobster to Golden Gate Capital, a private equity firm, for $2.1 billion. Since 2020, seafood distributor Thai Union Group, based in Thailand, has been the largest Red Lobster shareholder. Thai Union owns 49% of the company. But Red Lobster has struggled under Thai Union. The number of customers coming to Red Lobster tumbled 30% since 2019 and has only slightly improved since the pandemic. Earlier this year, Thai Union said it would divest from Red Lobster and take a $530 million loss on its investment. Former Red Lobster employees say Thai Union’s cost-cutting efforts and strategy mistakes hurt the chain. “Thai Union forced huge cost reductions, including many that were penny wise and pound foolish because they hurt sales,” a former Red Lobster executive who spoke under the condition of anonymity because of a non-disclosure agreement with the company told CNN earlier this month. Thai Union did not respond to requests for comment on that article. Red Lobster executives began to run for the doors under Thai Union’s management, resulting in a huge amount of C-suite churn. Red Lobster has had five CEOs since 2021. In 2021 and 2022, Red Lobster brought on a new CEO, chief marketing officer, chief financial officer and chief information officer. All were gone within two years. Last summer, under Thai Union, Red Lobster turned $20 endless shrimp into a permanent item on the menu for the first time, instead of its traditional limited-time offer deal. The change cost the company $11 million and cut into Thai Union profit. In its bankruptcy filing, Red Lobster said it is investigating the circumstances of that promotion, which the company’s management opposed. “We need to be much more careful,” Thai Union CFO Ludovic Garnier said on an earnings call in November 2023. But the company in its bankruptcy filing blamed Thai Union for the losses. Noting that under the guise of a “quality review,” Red Lobster eliminated two of its breaded shrimp suppliers, leaving Thai Union with an exclusive deal. That led to higher costs for the restaurant chain, and did not comply with the company’s typical decision-making process for picking suppliers based on projected demand. The explosive growth and popularity of fast-casual chains like Chipotle and quick-service chains like Chick-fil-A over the past two decades also squeezed Red Lobster. Casual dining has slipped from 36% of total restaurant industry sales in 2013 to 31% in 2023, according to Technomic, a restaurant research firm. In its bankruptcy filing, Red Lobster conceded it had “a bloated and underperforming restaurant footprint” and cited a difficult economic environment and increased competition for its recent financial failures. Red Lobster has been telegraphing its bankruptcy for months. In January, the company hired Jonathan Tibus, a restructuring veteran, to assess its business. It named Tibus as CEO in March. Last week, the company began shutting down 93 restaurants in preparation for its bankruptcy. As it ran out of cash, the company stopped paying its vendors last year. The company plans to stay afloat with a $100 million financing agreement, it said in its bankruptcy petition. This story has been updated with additional developments and context.",CNN,20/05/2024,"['Red Lobster, which brought affordable shrimp and lobster to middle-class America and grew to become the largest seafood restaurant chain in the world, has filed for bankruptcy.', 'The company said it had more than $1 billion in debt and less than $30 million in cash on hand.', 'It plans to sell its business to its lenders, and in turn, it will receive financing to stay afloat.', 'It expects to continue to close restaurants in the meantime.', 'Red Lobster, known for its cheddar bay biscuits, crab legs and shrimp dishes, spread around the country during the 1980s and 1990s.', 'In 2016, Beyoncé mentioned Red Lobster in her song “Formation,” describing bringing a romantic partner to Red Lobster, causing sales to surge.', 'With 578 restaurants across 44 states and Canada, Red Lobster serves 64 million customers a year, and it brings in $2 billion in annual sales, the company said in its bankruptcy filing.', 'One in five lobster tails purchased in North America is bought by Red Lobster.', 'But recent mismanagement, competition, inflation and other factors brought down Red Lobster, analysts and former Red Lobster employees say.', 'Years of underinvestment in Red Lobster’s marketing, food quality, service and restaurant upgrades hurt the chain’s ability to compete with growing fast-casual and quick-service chains.', 'Red Lobster started in 1968 by Bill Darden, an architect of the casual dining revolution in America, and General Mills soon bought the restaurant.', 'Red Lobster later became part of Darden Restaurants, the owner of Olive Garden and other chains.', 'In 2014, Darden sold off Red Lobster to Golden Gate Capital, a private equity firm, for $2.1 billion.', 'Since 2020, seafood distributor Thai Union Group, based in Thailand, has been the largest Red Lobster shareholder.', 'Thai Union owns 49% of the company.', 'But Red Lobster has struggled under Thai Union.', 'The number of customers coming to Red Lobster tumbled 30% since 2019 and has only slightly improved since the pandemic.', 'Earlier this year, Thai Union said it would divest from Red Lobster and take a $530 million loss on its investment.', 'Former Red Lobster employees say Thai Union’s cost-cutting efforts and strategy mistakes hurt the chain.', '“Thai Union forced huge cost reductions, including many that were penny wise and pound foolish because they hurt sales,” a former Red Lobster executive who spoke under the condition of anonymity because of a non-disclosure agreement with the company told CNN earlier this month.', 'Thai Union did not respond to requests for comment on that article.', 'Red Lobster executives began to run for the doors under Thai Union’s management, resulting in a huge amount of C-suite churn.', 'Red Lobster has had five CEOs since 2021.', 'In 2021 and 2022, Red Lobster brought on a new CEO, chief marketing officer, chief financial officer and chief information officer.', 'All were gone within two years.', 'Last summer, under Thai Union, Red Lobster turned $20 endless shrimp into a permanent item on the menu for the first time, instead of its traditional limited-time offer deal.', 'The change cost the company $11 million and cut into Thai Union profit.', 'In its bankruptcy filing, Red Lobster said it is investigating the circumstances of that promotion, which the company’s management opposed.', '“We need to be much more careful,” Thai Union CFO Ludovic Garnier said on an earnings call in November 2023.', 'But the company in its bankruptcy filing blamed Thai Union for the losses.', 'Noting that under the guise of a “quality review,” Red Lobster eliminated two of its breaded shrimp suppliers, leaving Thai Union with an exclusive deal.', 'That led to higher costs for the restaurant chain, and did not comply with the company’s typical decision-making process for picking suppliers based on projected demand.', 'The explosive growth and popularity of fast-casual chains like Chipotle and quick-service chains like Chick-fil-A over the past two decades also squeezed Red Lobster.', 'Casual dining has slipped from 36% of total restaurant industry sales in 2013 to 31% in 2023, according to Technomic, a restaurant research firm.', 'In its bankruptcy filing, Red Lobster conceded it had “a bloated and underperforming restaurant footprint” and cited a difficult economic environment and increased competition for its recent financial failures.', 'Red Lobster has been telegraphing its bankruptcy for months.', 'In January, the company hired Jonathan Tibus, a restructuring veteran, to assess its business.', 'It named Tibus as CEO in March.', 'Last week, the company began shutting down 93 restaurants in preparation for its bankruptcy.', 'As it ran out of cash, the company stopped paying its vendors last year.', 'The company plans to stay afloat with a $100 million financing agreement, it said in its bankruptcy petition.', 'This story has been updated with additional developments and context.']",0.0087222652082627,The explosive growth and popularity of fast-casual chains like Chipotle and quick-service chains like Chick-fil-A over the past two decades also squeezed Red Lobster.,But the company in its bankruptcy filing blamed Thai Union for the losses.,-0.3643529415130615,The number of customers coming to Red Lobster tumbled 30% since 2019 and has only slightly improved since the pandemic.,"In its bankruptcy filing, Red Lobster conceded it had “a bloated and underperforming restaurant footprint” and cited a difficult economic environment and increased competition for its recent financial failures.",2024-05-20 NBC News ousts Ronna McDaniel after network’s anchors launch unprecedented on-air rebellion,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/media/nbc-news-ousts-ronna-mcdaniel/index.html," Updated 7:44 PM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","NBC News on Tuesday ousted former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel, just days after her hiring as a paid political analyst sparked intense backlash from the network’s top television anchors over McDaniel’s role in subverting the 2020 election and attacks on the press. “There is no doubt that the last several days have been difficult for the News Group,” NBCUniversal News Group President Cesar Conde said in a memo to staff. “After listening to the legitimate concerns of many of you, I have decided that Ronna McDaniel will not be an NBC News contributor.” “I want to personally apologize to our team members who felt we let them down,” Conde continued. “While this was a collective recommendation by some members of our leadership team, I approved it and take full responsibility for it.” Ahead of the network’s decision, McDaniel spent the day Tuesday interviewing attorneys in preparation for a potential legal battle with NBC, a person familiar with the matter told CNN. Creative Artists Agency, the talent agency that brokered McDaniel’s deal with NBC, also parted ways with her, the person said. The reversal comes after journalists and anchors at both NBC and its cable news sibling MSNBC publicly denounced the decision to hire McDaniel as a paid analyst in a stunning and unprecedented on-air rebuke of network brass that has embarrassed the Peacock Network. McDaniel, who recently stepped down from the RNC under pressure from former President Donald Trump, was involved in attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 election. As head of the RNC, she was involved in a phone call in 2020 to pressure Michigan county officials not to certify the vote from the Detroit area, where Joe Biden had a commanding lead. McDaniel told the officials, regarding the certification: “Do not sign it. … We will get you attorneys.” In the years since, McDaniel continued to claim that the election had “problems” and that Biden did not legitimately win the election, fanning the flames of election denialism. NBC’s announcement Friday that it had hired McDaniel was quickly met with alarm by the network’s journalists. The revolt spilled into public view on Sunday when McDaniel appeared on “Meet the Press” with moderator Kristen Welker in her first interview since she was hired by the network. Welker disclosed that the interview had been scheduled to take place prior to NBC announcing McDaniel would become a paid contributor for the network, stating that she had no involvement in her hiring. Following the interview, Chuck Todd, NBC News’ chief political analyst, delivered a stinging on-air criticism of NBC executives for their decision to hire McDaniel, telling Welker, “I think our bosses owe you an apology for putting you in this situation.” “There’s a reason a lot of journalists at NBC News are uncomfortable with this,” Todd said, explaining that under McDaniel, the RNC engaged in “gaslighting” and “character assassination” when dealing with the news media. The following day, MSNBC hosts Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough joined Todd in protesting the decision on their program “Morning Joe.” “To be clear, we believe NBC News should seek out conservative Republican voices to provide balance in their election coverage, but it should be conservative Republicans, not a person who used her position of power to be an anti-democracy election denier,” Brzezinski said. “We hope NBC will reconsider its decision. It goes without saying that she will not be a guest on ‘Morning Joe’ in her capacity as a paid contributor.” Nicolle Wallace, host of MSNBC’s “Deadline: White House,” later joined in the rebuke, saying on her program that the network’s decision to hire McDaniel was nothing short of a potential threat to democracy. “NBC News is, either wittingly or unwittingly, teaching election deniers that what they can do stretches well beyond appearing on our air and interviews to peddle lies about the sanctity and integrity of our elections,” Wallace told viewers. Rachel Maddow — the network’s biggest star — later devoted the first half-hour of her prime-time program to the controversy, saying the decision to hire McDaniel was “inexplicable.” Maddow took issue with McDaniel’s long track record of demonizing the news media, labeling the press as “fake news,” and launching ugly attacks on NBC News journalists and MSNBC hosts. “We do not take it personally when we get attacked, when they say they want to put us on trial and execute us for treason,” she said. “And so I want to associate myself with all my colleagues at MSNBC and NBC News who have voiced loud and principled objections to our company for putting on the payroll someone who hasn’t just attacked us as journalists, but someone who is part of an ongoing project to get rid of our system of government,” she said of McDaniel. “Someone who is still trying to convince Americans that this election stuff doesn’t really work. That this last election wasn’t a real result. That American elections are fraudulent.“ The on-air revolt ensnared NBC’s top leaders, including NBCUniversal News Group chair Cesar Conde, NBC News president Rebecca Blumenstein and senior vice president of politics Carrie Budoff Brown, who were responsible for McDaniel’s hiring. MSNBC president Rashida Jones also did not object to the decision, people familiar with the matter said. In the wake of Conde’s announcement to sever ties with McDaniel, MSNBC host Joy Reid and Maddow addressed the reversal on the network’s air, praising the move as “bold” and “strong.” “I think it is a show of strength and a show of respect for the people who work at this company and make us who we are,” Maddow said. “That leadership was willing to change on this, I’m grateful to them.”",CNN,26/03/2024,"['NBC News on Tuesday ousted former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel, just days after her hiring as a paid political analyst sparked intense backlash from the network’s top television anchors over McDaniel’s role in subverting the 2020 election and attacks on the press.', '“There is no doubt that the last several days have been difficult for the News Group,” NBCUniversal News Group President Cesar Conde said in a memo to staff. “', 'After listening to the legitimate concerns of many of you, I have decided that Ronna McDaniel will not be an NBC News contributor.”', '“I want to personally apologize to our team members who felt we let them down,” Conde continued. “', 'While this was a collective recommendation by some members of our leadership team, I approved it and take full responsibility for it.”', 'Ahead of the network’s decision, McDaniel spent the day Tuesday interviewing attorneys in preparation for a potential legal battle with NBC, a person familiar with the matter told CNN.', 'Creative Artists Agency, the talent agency that brokered McDaniel’s deal with NBC, also parted ways with her, the person said.', 'The reversal comes after journalists and anchors at both NBC and its cable news sibling MSNBC publicly denounced the decision to hire McDaniel as a paid analyst in a stunning and unprecedented on-air rebuke of network brass that has embarrassed the Peacock Network.', 'McDaniel, who recently stepped down from the RNC under pressure from former President Donald Trump, was involved in attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 election.', 'As head of the RNC, she was involved in a phone call in 2020 to pressure Michigan county officials not to certify the vote from the Detroit area, where Joe Biden had a commanding lead.', 'McDanieltold the officials, regarding the certification: “Do not sign it. …', 'We will get you attorneys.”', 'In the years since, McDaniel continued to claim that the election had “problems” and that Biden did not legitimately win the election, fanning the flames of election denialism.', 'NBC’s announcement Friday that it had hired McDaniel was quickly met with alarm by the network’s journalists.', 'The revolt spilled into public view on Sunday when McDaniel appeared on “Meet the Press” with moderator Kristen Welker in her first interview since she was hired by the network.', 'Welker disclosed that the interview had been scheduled to take place prior to NBC announcing McDaniel would become a paid contributor for the network, stating that she had no involvement in her hiring.', 'Following the interview, Chuck Todd, NBC News’ chief political analyst, delivered a stinging on-air criticism of NBC executives for their decision to hire McDaniel, telling Welker, “I think our bosses owe you an apology for putting you in this situation.”', '“There’s a reason a lot of journalists at NBC News are uncomfortable with this,” Todd said, explaining that under McDaniel, the RNC engaged in “gaslighting” and “character assassination” when dealing with the news media.', 'The following day, MSNBC hosts Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough joined Todd in protesting the decision on their program “Morning Joe.”', '“To be clear, we believe NBC News should seek out conservative Republican voices to provide balance in their election coverage, but it should be conservative Republicans, not a person who used her position of power to be an anti-democracy election denier,”Brzezinski said. “', 'We hope NBC will reconsider its decision.', 'It goes without saying that she will not be a guest on ‘Morning Joe’ in her capacity as a paid contributor.”', 'Nicolle Wallace, host of MSNBC’s “Deadline: White House,” later joined in the rebuke, saying on her program that the network’s decision to hire McDaniel was nothing short of a potential threat to democracy.', '“NBC News is, either wittingly or unwittingly, teaching election deniers that what they can do stretches well beyond appearing on our air and interviews to peddle lies about the sanctity and integrity of our elections,” Wallace told viewers.', 'Rachel Maddow — the network’s biggest star — later devoted the first half-hour of her prime-time program to the controversy, saying the decision to hire McDaniel was “inexplicable.”', 'Maddow took issue with McDaniel’s long track record of demonizing the news media, labeling the press as “fake news,” and launching ugly attacks on NBC News journalists and MSNBC hosts.', '“We do not take it personally when we get attacked, when they say they want to put us on trial and execute us for treason,” she said.', '“And so I want to associate myself with all my colleagues at MSNBC and NBC News who have voiced loud and principled objections to our company for putting on the payroll someone who hasn’t just attacked us as journalists, but someone who is part of an ongoing project to get rid of our system of government,” she said of McDaniel. “', 'Someone who is still trying to convince Americans that this election stuff doesn’t really work.', 'That this last election wasn’t a real result.', 'That American elections are fraudulent.“', 'The on-air revolt ensnared NBC’s top leaders, including NBCUniversal News Group chair Cesar Conde, NBC News president Rebecca Blumenstein and senior vice president of politics Carrie Budoff Brown, who were responsible for McDaniel’s hiring.', 'MSNBC president Rashida Jones also did not object to the decision, people familiar with the matter said.', 'In the wake of Conde’s announcement to sever ties with McDaniel, MSNBC host Joy Reid and Maddow addressed the reversal on the network’s air, praising the move as “bold” and “strong.”', '“I think it is a show of strength and a show of respect for the people who work at this company and make us who we are,” Maddow said. “', 'That leadership was willing to change on this, I’m grateful to them.”']",-0.0710578434549836,"In the wake of Conde’s announcement to sever ties with McDaniel, MSNBC host Joy Reid and Maddow addressed the reversal on the network’s air, praising the move as “bold” and “strong.”","Maddow took issue with McDaniel’s long track record of demonizing the news media, labeling the press as “fake news,” and launching ugly attacks on NBC News journalists and MSNBC hosts.",-0.4204912036657333,"In the wake of Conde’s announcement to sever ties with McDaniel, MSNBC host Joy Reid and Maddow addressed the reversal on the network’s air, praising the move as “bold” and “strong.”",The reversal comes after journalists and anchors at both NBC and its cable news sibling MSNBC publicly denounced the decision to hire McDaniel as a paid analyst in a stunning and unprecedented on-air rebuke of network brass that has embarrassed the Peacock Network.,2024-05-20 $400 for one pineapple: The rise of luxury fruit,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/19/business/pineapple-rubyglow-price/index.html," Published 9:30 AM EDT, Sun May 19, 2024 ","Imagine you have $400 to spend on a luxury dining experience. You might treat yourself to a tin of premium caviar, a bottle or two of very fine wine or a multi-course meal at a high-end restaurant. Or you could blow it all on a single pineapple. The Rubyglow pineapple –— bred for its distinctive red exterior and its sweetness — costs $395.99 at Melissa’s Produce, a California-based seller of specialty fruit and veggies. It took Del Monte, a wholesaler which sells a variety of produce but specializes in pineapple, a decade and a half to develop the red-hued fruit. A limited crop was first available in China early this year. Recently, Del Monte decided to see how the item would fare in the United States, and Melissa’s starting selling it at the astronomical price. It may not seem like the best time to market a (very, very) expensive piece of fruit in America. It wasn’t that long ago that soaring grocery prices made headline news, stressing out consumers and stretching their budgets thin. Still nervous about inflation and worried about unemployment, many Americans are now spending less. And yet, there’s interest in premium fruit — enough to convince Del Monte to bring the Rubyglow, which is grown in Costa Rica, stateside. “Consumers are willing to pay for something that’s special,” said Cindy van Rijswick, fresh produce strategist for Rabobank’s global research team. When it comes to specialty produce, “there’s always a small market for higher-end restaurants, or foodies, or certain online channels,” she said. Americans have become interested in particular for new fruit varieties in recent years, paying a premium for Honeycrisp apples, Cotton Candy grapes, Sumo Citrus and vertically-grown Japanese strawberries. Now, they are hungry for different types of fruit, and are ready to shell out for exciting new options. But a $400 pineapple? That’s a bit rich. When the Honeycrisp was introduced over 30 years ago, there weren’t many apple options in the supermarket. Red Delicious, Golden Delicious and, in some areas, McIntosh apples were standard fare, recalled Jim Luby, a professor in the horticultural science department at the University of Minnesota. But that was about it. “If you didn’t go out to a local orchard, you didn’t have that many choices.” People were hungry for more, and Honeycrisp fit the bill — sweet, crisp and novel. “It became popular in Minnesota amongst our growers,” said Luby, who was part of the team that developed the variety. “There wasn’t that much production. So it was priced high. And yet it kept selling.” Marketing new produce is a costly affair. Researchers have to breed and cross-breed, wait out the growing cycle, and start over if the fruit disappoints. Finding something that is both delicious and resilient enough to be commercially successful takes time, and a lot of painstaking work. Then plant scientists have to convince growers to make an investment in an unproven fruit, devoting resources that could be used for old favorites. But the Honeycrisp helped show that the risk can be justified. Since the apple’s success, variety in the produce section has increased. Over roughly the past decade, per capita availability — a good proxy for consumption — of higher-priced fruit, like berries, mango and avocados, has increased, according to Rabobank, which drew from USDA data. In that time, availability of cheaper fruit like apples and bananas has essentially stayed flat. Some specialty fruits have even developed cult followings: those Cotton Candy grapes, named for their sweetness, hit the scene in 2011 and quickly became popular. Sumo Citrus, a hybrid of navel oranges, pomelos and mandarins, was more of a slow burn, but has exploded in recent years. In these cases, consumers have been willing to spend a little bit more. But those items are cheap in comparison to Oishii’s specialty strawberries, grown indoors in a climate-controlled vertical farm. When its berries first became available to the public in 2018, Oishii charged $50 for a pack of eight. Oishii is selling more than just berries: It’s selling a luxury item. The berries are packed in flat boxes that spotlight each individual fruit, more like a package for hand-crafted chocolate truffles than the mold-hiding plastic containers you see at a supermarket. Each fruit is supposed to be perfect. “Even at $50, we had thousands of people on the waitlist constantly,” said Oishii CEO Hiroki Koga. Buzzy or not, $50 for strawberries is not a sustainable price. Today, after rounds of funding and improved technology, Oishii’s products are more readily available, and much cheaper. You can get Oishii berries at mainstream grocers for around $10-$14 per pack. Del Monte’s researchers have been coming up with different types of pineapples for years, designing proprietary fruit and often optimizing for taste. In 2020 the company launched its own pretty, giftable fruit — the Pinkglow pineapple, which has pink flesh and comes in its own special box. The Pinkglow was never supposed to be a grocery list staple, said Melissa Mackay, VP of marketing in North America at Del Monte. “It’s a hostess gift, it’s a Mother’s Day gift,” she said. It’s also perfect for Instagram and TikTok, where food influencers with large followings cut open the fruit, marveled at its color and shared their reviews (the verdict: very sweet). At first, the Pinkglow was sold for about $50. Today, you can get one for far less, online between around $8 and $29 — bargain prices, relatively, but still steep for a pineapple. If you can afford it, splurging on a pink pineapple is “permissible, because you’re investing in something that’s good for you,” said Melanie Zanoza Bartelme, associate director of Mintel Food & Drink. “It’s like people who go to Erewhon and spend almost $20 on a smoothie that a celebrity created,” she said, referring to the high-end Los Angeles grocery store known for collaborating with celebrities on pricey smoothies (like Hailey Bieber’s Strawberry Glaze Skin Smoothie, priced at $19 for a 20-ounce cup). Still, she noted, there is a “blank space between a $16 pineapple and a $400 pineapple.” Melissa’s Produce, which sells everything from truffles to mangosteens to kumquats, describes the Rubyglow on its website as a “rare gem” and “the pinnacle of luxury fruit,” adding that “for the gourmand, it’s an unforgettable gift.” The pitch has had limited success. Melissa’s started with 50 pineapples, according to Robert Schueller, director of public relations at Melissa’s Produce. So far, it has sold about half that number over the course of a month, including to restaurants in Las Vegas and Southern California, which he said are using the fruit in displays. “There’s a market for this,” Schueller said. It’s just a very small, very niche market. “This is not something for everybody.” To try to create more buzz, Melissa’s reached out to a handful of food influencers, including Bo Corley, a chef who shares recipes and other food tidbits on his social channels. The pineapple “was absolutely delightful,” Corley said. “There’s almost like a bitter aftertaste when you eat too much pineapple,” he explained. “You don’t have that with the Rubyglow.” But, he said, it wasn’t worth $400. Corley can see people spending to get their hands on the Rubyglow, if not for the taste of the pineapple itself then for the wow factor of the brilliant exterior. “I think charcuterie boards this Christmas, Thanksgiving — you’re going to see this Rubyglow as a centerpiece, especially in an affluent house,” he said. In other words, people may not spend for the taste of the pineapple, but just to show off that they have it.",CNN,19/05/2024,"['Imagine you have $400 to spend on a luxury dining experience.', 'You might treat yourself to a tin of premium caviar, a bottle or two of very fine wine or a multi-course meal at a high-end restaurant.', 'Or you could blow it all on a single pineapple.', 'The Rubyglow pineapple –— bred for its distinctive red exterior and its sweetness — costs $395.99 at Melissa’s Produce, a California-based seller of specialty fruit and veggies.', 'It took Del Monte, a wholesaler which sells a variety of produce but specializes in pineapple, a decade and a half to develop the red-hued fruit.', 'A limited crop was first available in China early this year.', 'Recently, Del Monte decided to see how the item would fare in the United States, and Melissa’s starting selling it at the astronomical price.', 'It may not seem like the best time to market a (very, very) expensive piece of fruit in America.', 'It wasn’t that long ago that soaring grocery prices made headline news, stressing out consumers and stretching their budgets thin.', 'Still nervous about inflation and worried about unemployment, many Americans are now spending less.', 'And yet, there’s interest in premium fruit — enough to convince Del Monte to bring the Rubyglow, which is grown in Costa Rica, stateside.', '“Consumers are willing to pay for something that’s special,” said Cindy van Rijswick, fresh produce strategist for Rabobank’s global research team.', 'When it comes to specialty produce, “there’s always a small market for higher-end restaurants, or foodies, or certain online channels,” she said.', 'Americans have become interested in particular for new fruit varieties in recent years, paying a premium for Honeycrisp apples, Cotton Candy grapes, Sumo Citrus and vertically-grown Japanese strawberries.', 'Now, they are hungry for different types of fruit, and are ready to shell out for exciting new options.', 'But a $400 pineapple?', 'That’s a bit rich.', 'When the Honeycrisp was introduced over 30 years ago, there weren’t many apple options in the supermarket.', 'Red Delicious, Golden Delicious and, in some areas, McIntosh apples were standard fare, recalled Jim Luby, a professor in the horticultural science department at the University of Minnesota.', 'But that was about it. “', 'If you didn’t go out to a local orchard, you didn’t have that many choices.”', 'People were hungry for more, and Honeycrisp fit the bill —sweet, crisp and novel.', '“It became popular in Minnesota amongst our growers,” said Luby, who was part of the team that developed the variety. “', 'There wasn’t that much production.', 'So it was priced high.', 'And yet it kept selling.”', 'Marketing new produce is a costly affair.', 'Researchers have to breed and cross-breed, wait out the growing cycle, and start over if the fruit disappoints.', 'Finding something that is both delicious and resilient enough to be commercially successful takes time, and a lot of painstaking work.', 'Then plant scientists have to convince growers to make an investment in an unproven fruit, devoting resources that could be used for old favorites.', 'But the Honeycrisp helped show that the risk can be justified.', 'Since the apple’s success, variety in the produce section has increased.', 'Over roughly the past decade, per capita availability —a good proxy for consumption — of higher-priced fruit, like berries, mango and avocados, has increased, according to Rabobank, which drew from USDA data.', 'In that time, availability of cheaper fruit like apples and bananas has essentially stayed flat.', 'Some specialty fruits have even developed cult followings: those Cotton Candy grapes, named for their sweetness, hit the scene in 2011 and quickly became popular.', 'Sumo Citrus, a hybrid of navel oranges, pomelos and mandarins, was more of a slow burn, but has exploded in recent years.', 'In these cases, consumers have been willing to spend a little bit more.', 'But those items are cheap in comparison to Oishii’s specialty strawberries, grown indoors in a climate-controlled vertical farm.', 'When its berries first became available to the public in 2018, Oishii charged $50 for a pack of eight.', 'Oishii is selling more than just berries: It’s selling a luxury item.', 'The berries are packed in flat boxes that spotlight each individual fruit, more like a package for hand-crafted chocolate truffles than the mold-hiding plastic containers you see at a supermarket.', 'Each fruit is supposed to be perfect.', '“Even at $50, we had thousands of people on the waitlist constantly,” said Oishii CEO Hiroki Koga.', 'Buzzy or not, $50 for strawberries is not a sustainable price.', 'Today, after rounds of funding and improved technology, Oishii’s products are more readily available, and much cheaper.', 'You can get Oishii berries at mainstream grocers for around $10-$14 per pack.', 'Del Monte’s researchers have been coming up with different types of pineapples for years, designing proprietary fruit and often optimizing for taste.', 'In 2020 the company launched its own pretty, giftable fruit —the Pinkglow pineapple, which has pink flesh and comes in its own special box.', 'The Pinkglow was never supposed to be a grocery list staple, said Melissa Mackay, VP of marketing in North America at Del Monte. “', 'It’s a hostess gift, it’s a Mother’s Day gift,” she said.', 'It’s also perfect for Instagram and TikTok, where food influencers with large followings cut open the fruit, marveled at its color and shared their reviews (the verdict: very sweet).', 'At first, the Pinkglow was sold for about $50.', 'Today, you can get one for far less, online between around $8 and $29 — bargain prices, relatively, but still steep for a pineapple.', 'If you can afford it, splurging on a pink pineapple is “permissible, because you’re investing in something that’s good for you,” said Melanie Zanoza Bartelme, associate director of Mintel Food & Drink. “', 'It’s like people who go to Erewhon and spend almost $20 on a smoothie that a celebrity created,” she said, referring to the high-end Los Angeles grocery store known for collaborating with celebrities on pricey smoothies (like Hailey Bieber’s Strawberry Glaze Skin Smoothie, priced at $19 for a 20-ounce cup).', 'Still, she noted, there is a “blank space between a $16 pineapple and a $400 pineapple.”', 'Melissa’s Produce, which sells everything from truffles to mangosteens to kumquats, describes the Rubyglow on its website as a “rare gem” and “the pinnacle of luxury fruit,” adding that “for the gourmand, it’s an unforgettable gift.”', 'The pitch has had limited success.', 'Melissa’s started with 50 pineapples, according to Robert Schueller, director of public relations at Melissa’s Produce.', 'So far, it has sold about half that number over the course of a month, including to restaurants in Las Vegas and Southern California, which he said are using the fruit in displays.', '“There’s a market for this,” Schueller said.', 'It’s just a very small, very niche market. “', 'This is not something for everybody.”', 'To try to create more buzz, Melissa’s reached out to a handful of food influencers, including Bo Corley, a chef who shares recipes and other food tidbits on his social channels.', 'The pineapple “was absolutely delightful,” Corley said. “', 'There’s almost like a bitter aftertaste when you eat too much pineapple,” he explained. “', 'You don’t have that with the Rubyglow.”', 'But, he said, it wasn’t worth $400.', 'Corley can see people spending to get their hands on the Rubyglow, if not for the taste of the pineapple itself then for the wow factor of the brilliant exterior.', '“I think charcuterie boards this Christmas, Thanksgiving —you’re going to see this Rubyglow as a centerpiece, especially in an affluent house,” he said.', 'In other words, people may not spend for the taste of the pineapple, but just to show off that they have it.']",0.2596528769118228,"It’s also perfect for Instagram and TikTok, where food influencers with large followings cut open the fruit, marveled at its color and shared their reviews (the verdict: very sweet).","Still nervous about inflation and worried about unemployment, many Americans are now spending less.",0.5733190046416389,"Since the apple’s success, variety in the produce section has increased.","Still nervous about inflation and worried about unemployment, many Americans are now spending less.",2024-05-20 Union momentum stalls with defeat at Mercedes-Benz,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/clw0wwwdryno,2024-05-17T20:40:10.629Z,"The United Autoworkers Union (UAW) in the US has suffered a defeat in its campaign to expand membership to car factories in the American south. Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama voted 2,642-2,045 against joining the union, with 56% of eligible ballots cast opposed, according to the National Labor Relations Committee. The outcome is a blow to an effort the union started last year, hoping to seize on a wider resurgence in worker activism and build on the momentum it had gained after winning big raises for workers at General Motors, Ford and Stellantis. The UAW notched its first victory at a Volkswagen factory in Tennessee last month. But its efforts in Alabama met with stiff resistance, including from state and local politicians such as Governor Kay Ivey, who called the union campaign a ""threat from Detroit"" that put the state's car industry at risk. Regulators are also investigating union complaints that the company broke labour law in its opposition to the effort, including by barring distribution of union materials and punishing staff who discussed or supported the effort. Mercedes has denied the claims. It said before the vote that it respected its staff's right to choose, while believing that ""open and direct communication with our Team Members is the best path forward to ensure continued success"". After the results were announced, the company said its goal had been ""to ensure every eligible team member had the opportunity to participate in a fair election"". ""We thank all team members who asked questions, engaged in discussions, and ultimately, made their voices heard on this important issue,"" it said in a statement. UAW boss Shawn Fain last year announced that the UAW would target 13 foreign-owned factories in the South, in a bid to bring in new members to the organisation, whose numbers have steadily dwindled. It marked a risky push for the organisation - which is closely associated with the Democratic party - in to a part of the country that is both staunchly Republican and historically hostile to unions. Mr Fain said in a press conference after the results that it had been a ""David and Goliath"" fight, in which the company had used ""egregious illegal behaviour"" to swing the vote its way. ""We know what we're taking on,"" he said. ""While this loss stings, we're going to keep our heads up."" He said even the threat of unionisation had helped improve conditions at the factory, leading to a pay increase and other changes. He said he was not scared it would hurt the UAW's campaigns at other factories. ""We fought the good fight and we're going to continue forward,"" he said. Outside of the car industry, the last major effort to organise workers in Alabama at an Amazon factory failed in 2021. ",BBC,17/05/2024,"['The United Autoworkers Union (UAW) in the US has suffered a defeat in its campaign to expand membership to car factories in the American south.', 'Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama voted 2,642-2,045 against joining the union, with 56% of eligible ballots cast opposed, according to the National Labor Relations Committee.', 'The outcome is a blow to an effort the union started last year, hoping to seize on a wider resurgence in worker activism and build on the momentum it had gained after winning big raises for workers at General Motors, Ford and Stellantis.', 'The UAW notched its first victory at a Volkswagen factory in Tennessee last month.', 'But its efforts in Alabama met with stiff resistance, including from state and local politicians such as Governor Kay Ivey, who called the union campaign a ""threat from Detroit"" that put the state\'s car industry at risk.', 'Regulators are also investigating union complaints that the company broke labour law in its opposition to the effort, including by barring distribution of union materials and punishing staff who discussed or supported the effort.', 'Mercedes has denied the claims.', 'It said before the vote that it respected its staff\'s right to choose, while believing that ""open and direct communication with our Team Members is the best path forward to ensure continued success"".', 'After the results were announced, the company said its goal had been ""to ensure every eligible team member had the opportunity to participate in a fair election"". ""', 'We thank all team members who asked questions, engaged in discussions, and ultimately, made their voices heard on this important issue,"" it said in a statement.', 'UAW boss Shawn Fain last year announced that the UAW would target 13 foreign-owned factories in the South, in a bid to bring in new members to the organisation, whose numbers have steadily dwindled.', 'It marked a risky push for the organisation - which is closely associated with the Democratic party - in to a part of the country that is both staunchly Republican and historically hostile to unions.', 'Mr Fain said in a press conference after the results that it had been a ""David and Goliath"" fight, in which the company had used ""egregious illegal behaviour"" to swing the vote its way. ""', 'We know what we\'re taking on,"" he said. ""', 'While this loss stings, we\'re going to keep our heads up.""', 'He said even the threat of unionisation had helped improve conditions at the factory, leading to a pay increase and other changes.', 'He said he was not scared it would hurt the UAW\'s campaigns at other factories. ""', 'We fought the good fight and we\'re going to continue forward,"" he said.', 'Outside of the car industry, the last major effort to organise workers in Alabama at an Amazon factory failed in 2021.']",-0.0555974619666719,"It said before the vote that it respected its staff's right to choose, while believing that ""open and direct communication with our Team Members is the best path forward to ensure continued success"".","But its efforts in Alabama met with stiff resistance, including from state and local politicians such as Governor Kay Ivey, who called the union campaign a ""threat from Detroit"" that put the state's car industry at risk.",-0.1374789774417877,"He said even the threat of unionisation had helped improve conditions at the factory, leading to a pay increase and other changes.","UAW boss Shawn Fain last year announced that the UAW would target 13 foreign-owned factories in the South, in a bid to bring in new members to the organisation, whose numbers have steadily dwindled.",2024-05-20 "Water industry investors have withdrawn billions, claims research",https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cw4478wnjdpo,2024-05-19T23:00:42.271Z,"Shareholders in some of the UK's largest water companies have taken out tens of billions of pounds but failed to invest, new research claims, with firms planning to raise household bills to fund future spending. Investors have withdrawn £85.2bn from 10 water and sewage firms in England and Wales since the industry was privatised more than 30 years ago, analysis by the University of Greenwich suggests. Companies are under pressure following sewage spills and water leaks, which critics have blamed on under-investment in the country's infrastructure. Ofwat, the industry regulator, said it ""strongly refuted"" the figures. ""While we agree wholeheartedly with demands for companies to change, the facts are there has been huge investment in the sector of over £200bn,"" a spokesperson said. Water UK, which represents the industry, said investment in the sector was ""double the annual levels seen before privatisation"". Water and sewage firms want to increase customers' bills by an average 33% over the next five years to fund improvements in the services for households. But David Hall, visiting professor at the Public Services International Research Unit at the University of Greenwich, claims that water companies have invested ""less than nothing of their own money"" and are “treating their customers like a cash cow”. The University of Greenwich examined the company accounts of the top 10 water and sewage companies in England and Wales including Thames Water, United Utilities and Severn Trent. It said that between privatisation in 1989 and 2023, money invested by shareholders in the largest firms shrunk by £5.5bn when adjusted for inflation. Over the same period, the amount of ""retained earnings"" - profits left over once things like dividends have been paid out, that can be used to invest in a business - had dropped by £6.7bn in real terms. Meanwhile, the total amount that these firms paid out to their shareholders in dividends grew to £72.8bn, when taking inflation into account. Ofwat said the dividend figure was ""simply wrong"". ""[It] does not represent the true total given it is inflation-adjusted. Ofwat offers the figure since privatisation as £52bn,"" the regulator said. Taken together, the fall in shareholders' investment and retained earnings - or profit - and rising dividend payments mean that, according to the University of Greenwich, owners have withdrawn £85.2bn. Water and sewage firms want to spend around £100bn over the next five years. They argue that they need more money to improve their infrastructure to help limit leaks. But Prof Hall said: ""You put the prices up because you can and you get more money out of the customers, and then you pass it on to the shareholders because the business you’re in is providing a good return to your shareholders. ""That’s why the companies do what they do and we shouldn’t expect anything different.” A spokesperson for Water UK said: ""Investment requires financing through dividends. ""Water companies now want to increase the pace of investment, with a record plan over the next five years, to ensure the security of our water supply in the future and significantly reduce the amount of sewage entering rivers and seas. ""We now need Ofwat to give us the green light to get on with it.” There were 464,056 sewage spills in 2023, according to the Environment Agency, a 54% increase on the previous year. Sewage is defined as anything that goes down a household drain. That includes from the toilet, personal washing or domestic cleaning such as from a washing machine or doing the dishes. It also includes run-off from roads. A warmer winter and wet weather has meant that many roadside grills have been overwhelmed. The next few weeks are key in determining by how much water companies can raise customers' bills. Ofwat will meet in the coming days to scrutinise water firms’ spending plans and proposed price rises which would affect bills between 2025 and 2030. Ofwat’s draft proposals are set to be published on 12 June. Water companies can appeal if they do not agree with Ofwat’s recommendations. But Prof Hall said there needed to be a fundamental change in the way that the water industry is run. ""This is a service that matters to us,"" he said. ""What we need to do is reverse this system and move to the way the rest of the world does it which is through public authorities and take it back in the public sector.” A spokesperson for Ofwat said: ""We share the concerns of the general public and campaigners about the performance of water companies which, is simply not good enough. ""We have been holding companies to account and have imposed penalties of over £300m in recent years. We want to see a transformation in companies' performance and will be setting out our plans to deliver this in mid-June."" By Simon Jack, Business editor Given the huge sums borrowed, invested and paid out from water companies since privatisation it is debatable whether the contribution of a billion here or a billion there from private shareholders' own pockets (equity) over that time would have made much difference to the financial problems at some of the water companies. According to Dieter Helm, professor of economic policy at Oxford University, the problem is not the payment of dividends per se, or their reluctance to make additional cash injections. It is the level of debt taken on by some companies without the regulator intervening. Some owners took advantage of the steady inflation-linked revenue from water bills to service large debts, which in some cases were used to pay dividends. In five out of the 10 years that Australian firm Macquarie was Thames Water’s biggest shareholder, dividends exceeded the amount of profit the company was making – and debt quadrupled from £2.5bn to more than £10bn. “Ofwat should never have allowed them to mortgage the balance sheet,” says Prof Helm. Thames shareholders recently withdrew an offer to inject a further £3bn cash into the company when it became clear that Ofwat would not allow them to raise customer bills by the 40% on top of inflation that they were requesting. According to Prof Helm, the regulator has allowed the company's balance sheet to become “exhausted” and while new equity is now needed, Ofwat is “trying to shut the stable door when the horse has bolted”. Arguments on the wisdom of privatising monopolies run deep and long. The pollution in our rivers and beaches is ample evidence of its failure for many, while others point to the fact that some £200bn has been invested in the water network and that is more than would have happened if invisible pipes underground had had to compete with more visible hospitals and schools competing for government money. In that time water bills have actually fallen in real terms, i.e. have risen less than inflation over three decades. That is about to see a sharp reversal as companies ask the regulator to approve bill increases of anywhere between 17% (Anglian Water) to 72% (Southern Water). Companies will not get everything they want but the BBC understands that they will get more than half of the bill increases they are hoping for. ",BBC,19/05/2024,"[""Shareholders in some of the UK's largest water companies have taken out tens of billions of pounds but failed to invest, new research claims, with firms planning to raise household bills to fund future spending."", 'Investors have withdrawn £85.2bn from 10 water and sewage firms in England and Wales since the industry was privatised more than 30 years ago, analysis by the University of Greenwich suggests.', ""Companies are under pressure following sewage spills and water leaks, which critics have blamed on under-investment in the country's infrastructure."", 'Ofwat, the industry regulator, said it ""strongly refuted"" the figures. ""', 'While we agree wholeheartedly with demands for companies to change, the facts are there has been huge investment in the sector of over £200bn,"" a spokesperson said.', 'Water UK, which represents the industry, said investment in the sector was ""double the annual levels seen before privatisation"".', ""Water and sewage firms want to increase customers' bills by an average 33% over the next five years to fund improvements in the services for households."", 'But David Hall, visiting professor at the Public Services International Research Unit at the University of Greenwich, claims that water companies have invested ""less than nothing of their own money"" and are “treating their customers like a cash cow”.', 'The University of Greenwich examined the company accounts of the top 10 water and sewage companies in England and Wales including Thames Water, United Utilities and Severn Trent.', 'It said that between privatisation in 1989 and 2023, money invested by shareholders in the largest firms shrunk by £5.5bn when adjusted for inflation.', 'Over the same period, the amount of ""retained earnings"" - profits left over once things like dividends have been paid out, that can be used to invest in a business - had dropped by £6.7bn in real terms.', 'Meanwhile, the total amount that these firms paid out to their shareholders in dividends grew to £72.8bn, when taking inflation into account.', 'Ofwat said the dividend figure was ""simply wrong"". ""[', 'It] does not represent the true total given it is inflation-adjusted.', 'Ofwat offers the figure since privatisation as £52bn,"" the regulator said.', ""Taken together, the fall in shareholders' investment and retained earnings - or profit - and rising dividend payments mean that, according to the University of Greenwich, owners have withdrawn £85.2bn."", 'Water and sewage firms want to spend around £100bn over the next five years.', 'They argue that they need more money to improve their infrastructure to help limit leaks.', 'But Prof Hall said: ""You put the prices up because you can and you get more money out of the customers, and then you pass it on to the shareholders because the business you’re in is providing a good return to your shareholders. ""', 'That’s why the companies do what they do and we shouldn’t expect anything different.”', 'A spokesperson for Water UK said: ""Investment requires financing through dividends. ""', 'Water companies now want to increase the pace of investment, with a record plan over the next five years, to ensure the security of our water supply in the future and significantly reduce the amount of sewage entering rivers and seas. ""', 'We now need Ofwat to give us the green light to get on with it.”', 'There were 464,056 sewage spills in 2023, according to the Environment Agency, a 54% increase on the previous year.', 'Sewage is defined as anything that goes down a household drain.', 'That includes from the toilet, personal washing or domestic cleaning such as from a washing machine or doing the dishes.', 'It also includes run-off from roads.', 'A warmer winter and wet weather has meant that many roadside grills have been overwhelmed.', ""The next few weeks are key in determining by how much water companies can raise customers' bills."", 'Ofwat will meet in the coming days to scrutinise water firms’ spending plans and proposed price rises which would affect bills between 2025 and 2030.', 'Ofwat’s draft proposals are set to be published on 12 June.', 'Water companies can appeal if they do not agree with Ofwat’s recommendations.', 'But Prof Hall said there needed to be a fundamental change in the way that the water industry is run. ""', 'This is a service that matters to us,"" he said. ""', 'What we need to do is reverse this system and move to the way the rest of the world does it which is through public authorities and take it back in the public sector.”', 'A spokesperson for Ofwat said: ""We share the concerns of the general public and campaigners about the performance of water companies which, is simply not good enough. ""', 'We have been holding companies to account and have imposed penalties of over £300m in recent years.', 'We want to see a transformation in companies\' performance and will be setting out our plans to deliver this in mid-June.""', ""By Simon Jack, Business editor Given the huge sums borrowed, invested and paid out from water companies since privatisation it is debatable whether the contribution of a billion here or a billion there from private shareholders' own pockets (equity) over that time would have made much difference to the financial problems at some of the water companies."", 'According to Dieter Helm, professor of economic policy at Oxford University, the problem is not the payment of dividends per se, or their reluctance to make additional cash injections.', 'It is the level of debt taken on by some companies without the regulator intervening.', 'Some owners took advantage of the steady inflation-linked revenue from water bills to service large debts, which in some cases were used to pay dividends.', 'In five out of the 10 years that Australian firm Macquarie was Thames Water’s biggest shareholder, dividends exceeded the amount of profit the company was making – and debt quadrupled from £2.5bn to more than £10bn. “', 'Ofwat should never have allowed them to mortgage the balance sheet,” says Prof Helm.', 'Thames shareholders recently withdrew an offer to inject a further £3bn cash into the company when it became clear that Ofwat would not allow them to raise customer bills by the 40% on top of inflation that they were requesting.', ""According to Prof Helm, the regulator has allowed the company's balance sheet to become “exhausted” and while new equity is now needed, Ofwat is “trying to shut the stable door when the horse has bolted”."", 'Arguments on the wisdom of privatising monopolies run deep and long.', 'The pollution in our rivers and beaches is ample evidence of its failure for many, while others point to the fact that some £200bn has been invested in the water network and that is more than would have happened if invisible pipes underground had had to compete with more visible hospitals and schools competing for government money.', 'In that time water bills have actually fallen in real terms, i.e. have risen less than inflation over three decades.', 'That is about to see a sharp reversal as companies ask the regulator to approve bill increases of anywhere between 17% (Anglian Water) to 72% (Southern Water).', 'Companies will not get everything they want but the BBC understands that they will get more than half of the bill increases they are hoping for.']",0.0617000298202696,"Water companies now want to increase the pace of investment, with a record plan over the next five years, to ensure the security of our water supply in the future and significantly reduce the amount of sewage entering rivers and seas. ""","Companies are under pressure following sewage spills and water leaks, which critics have blamed on under-investment in the country's infrastructure.",0.1285975552522219,"Meanwhile, the total amount that these firms paid out to their shareholders in dividends grew to £72.8bn, when taking inflation into account.","Taken together, the fall in shareholders' investment and retained earnings - or profit - and rising dividend payments mean that, according to the University of Greenwich, owners have withdrawn £85.2bn.",2024-05-20 Virgin Trains makes bid to return to West Coast Main Line,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3ggn8k166xo,2024-05-19T13:35:50.495Z,"Virgin Trains could return to running rail services on the West Coast route between London and Glasgow five years after losing the franchise. It means that Virgin would be competing with Avanti West Coast, the train company it lost the contract to in 2019. Virgin Trains had operated the service, which runs from London Euston via Birmingham and Manchester to Scotland, for 22 years before it was disqualified from bidding for the franchise. Virgin Group confirmed to the BBC that it had applied to the Office of Rail and Road, the regulator, for an Open Access licence. Under this type of licence, a firm does not receive any state subsidies and takes on the risk of running a rail service itself. In contrast, a franchised operator, such as Avanti, holds a contract with the government to run the route. A spokesperson for Virgin Group said: ""While this application is just the first step towards exploring what might be possible, we think Open Access is the way forward. ""Open Access increases consumer choice and competition both of which Virgin has always supported."" Since taking over the franchise, Avanti has faced fierce criticism over delays and cancellations. Last September, the Department for Transport (DfT) renewed Avanti West Coast's contract for up to nine years. The company is a joint venture between FirstGroup and Trenitalia, an Italian train operator. But in March this year, Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham called for Avanti to be stripped of the contract. “I’ve completely run out of patience. I cannot accept this railway line being left in this perennial state of chaos,” he said. The DfT ruled out such a move, stating that it ""would just cause more upheaval for passengers rather than solving the challenges the operator is facing"". Virgin Group said that it has applied to run services between London Euston to Preston and Rochdale via Manchester and Bolton in the north west as well as to Birmingham, Liverpool and Glasgow. The previous train company was a joint venture between Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Group and Stagecoach, the Scottish bus and rail company. But a spokesperson for Virgin said that it had had made the application independently. If it was successful, it would manage the trains itself. When Virgin Trains lost the contract, it had provided almost 500 million journeys. Sir Richard said at the time that he was ""devastated"". Its partner, Stagecoach had been disqualified from bidding for that franchise as well as two others because, according to the DfT, it did not meet rules about pensions and future funding. Just last year, Sir Richard had hinted that he wanted to get into the rail business. He told the Financial Times in December: “I would not be surprised if one day Virgin is not back in trains.” A spokesperson for the group said: “Virgin is exceptionally proud of everything Virgin Trains and its wonderful onboard teams achieved in the UK. ""We’re confident customers would welcome Virgin Trains back, providing them with much-needed choice and competition.” ",BBC,19/05/2024,"['Virgin Trains could return to running rail services on the West Coast route between London and Glasgow five years after losing the franchise.', 'It means that Virgin would be competing with Avanti West Coast, the train company it lost the contract to in 2019.', 'Virgin Trains had operated the service, which runs from London Euston via Birmingham and Manchester to Scotland, for 22 years before it was disqualified from bidding for the franchise.', 'Virgin Group confirmed to the BBC that it had applied to the Office of Rail and Road, the regulator, for an Open Access licence.', 'Under this type of licence, a firm does not receive any state subsidies and takes on the risk of running a rail service itself.', 'In contrast, a franchised operator, such as Avanti, holds a contract with the government to run the route.', 'A spokesperson for Virgin Group said: ""While this application is just the first step towards exploring what might be possible, we think Open Access is the way forward. ""', 'Open Access increases consumer choice and competition both of which Virgin has always supported.""', 'Since taking over the franchise, Avanti has faced fierce criticism over delays and cancellations.', ""Last September, the Department for Transport (DfT) renewed Avanti West Coast's contract for up to nine years."", 'The company is a joint venture between FirstGroup and Trenitalia, an Italian train operator.', 'But in March this year, Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham called for Avanti to be stripped of the contract. “', 'I’ve completely run out of patience.', 'I cannot accept this railway line being left in this perennial state of chaos,” he said.', 'The DfT ruled out such a move, stating that it ""would just cause more upheaval for passengers rather than solving the challenges the operator is facing"".', 'Virgin Group said that it has applied to run services between London Euston to Preston and Rochdale via Manchester and Bolton in the north west as well as to Birmingham, Liverpool and Glasgow.', ""The previous train company was a joint venture between Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Group and Stagecoach, the Scottish bus and rail company."", 'But a spokesperson for Virgin said that it had had made the application independently.', 'If it was successful, it would manage the trains itself.', 'When Virgin Trains lost the contract, it had provided almost 500 million journeys.', 'Sir Richard said at the time that he was ""devastated"".', 'Its partner, Stagecoach had been disqualified from bidding for that franchise as well as two others because, according to the DfT, it did not meet rules about pensions and future funding.', 'Just last year, Sir Richard had hinted that he wanted to get into the rail business.', 'He told the Financial Times in December: “I would not be surprised if one day Virgin is not back in trains.”', 'A spokesperson for the group said: “Virgin is exceptionally proud of everything Virgin Trains and its wonderful onboard teams achieved in the UK. ""', 'We’re confident customers would welcome Virgin Trains back, providing them with much-needed choice and competition.”']",-0.0080180115134046,"A spokesperson for the group said: “Virgin is exceptionally proud of everything Virgin Trains and its wonderful onboard teams achieved in the UK. ""","I cannot accept this railway line being left in this perennial state of chaos,” he said.",-0.0019230991601943,"We’re confident customers would welcome Virgin Trains back, providing them with much-needed choice and competition.”","The DfT ruled out such a move, stating that it ""would just cause more upheaval for passengers rather than solving the challenges the operator is facing"".",2024-05-20 Who is Paula Vennells? Ex-Post Office boss in Horizon IT inquiry,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cjq5g95e8vpo,2024-05-16T12:42:46.588Z,"Ex-Post Office boss Paula Vennells is set to give evidence this week as part of the inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal. Ms Vennells was chief executive of the Post Office from 2012 to 2019, which included the last few years of the scandal. Between 1999 and 2015, more than 900 sub-postmasters were wrongly prosecuted after faulty software said money was missing from Post Office branch accounts. Despite living a relatively private life, Ms Vennells, 65, is now one of the most recognisable faces of the scandal. Earlier this year, she was portrayed by actress Lia Williams in the ITV drama Mr Bates Vs The Post Office. Since the programme aired, she has only been spotted once in public, refusing to answer questions from a Channel 4 reporter on whether there had been a cover-up at the Post Office, as she cycled away from a church cemetery. The ITV drama also highlighted her position as an ordained priest - a role she pursued before she joined the Post Office - having trained as a Church of England deacon between 2002 and 2005 before eventually becoming ordained in 2006. Ms Vennells served at several churches in Bedfordshire and was interviewed for the position of the Bishop of London in 2017. She relinquished her clerical duties in 2021 but remains an ordained priest. Ms Vennells grew up in the north west of England and went to the University of Bradford to study French, Russian and Economics, where she met her future husband John. After graduating in 1981, she took the first step in her business career with a job at Unilever. She went on to work in management positions at big brands such as Argos, Dixons, L'Oréal, Morrisons, Dunelm and Whitbread. After leaving the Post Office in 2019, she acted as a non-executive board member at the Cabinet Office for a year, and also became chairman of Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust but resigned in December 2020 citing personal reasons. But it is her role at the Post Office that is under scrutiny. Ms Vennells joined the Post Office in 2007 as a group network director, and was promoted to chief executive in 2012, the same year that the Post Office split from Royal Mail. During her time at the Post Office there were periods of financial struggle, which forced thousands of post offices across the country to close. Many that remained were modernised and the Post Office went from losing millions a year to making a profit. Ms Vennells was photographed visiting several of the modernised branches and meeting those who ran them. In pictures, she is nearly always seen wearing her staple pearl earrings. During her time leading the Post Office, Ms Vennells earned a total of £5.1m, peaking in 2018 when she took home £718,300 in salary, bonuses, pensions and other benefits. Ms Vennells faced increasing criticism and scrutiny of how she dealt with the investigation into the Horizon software while she worked at the Post Office. She is widely quoted as calling the Horizon computer system ""robust"". The last time she spoke publicly about the scandal was nearly a decade ago, in 2015, when she was questioned by a committee of MPs. Former chancellor Nadhim Zahawi was on the Commons business committee at the time, and notably played himself for free when the scene was recreated in the ITV drama. He asked Ms Vennells why emails from 2009 were not given to private investigators and whether they would be. Ms Vennells said: ""We have shared whatever information is appropriate."" However, private investigator Ian Henderson denied that this was the case. Ms Vennells stepped down from the Post Office in 2019. At the start of that year she appeared on the New Years Honours List and was awarded a CBE for services to the Post Office and to charity. But by December 2019, the High Court had concluded that the faulty Horizon software was to blame for shortfalls in branch accounts. And as the ITV drama brought more national outrage over the Horizon scandal, this year legislation was introduced to overturn all sub-postmasters' convictions. Ms Vennells handed back her CBE in January this year, saying she was listening to ""calls from sub-postmasters and others"" to return the honour. Those same sub-postmasters and others will eagerly await her testimony before the inquiry, where she is scheduled to appear for three days starting on Wednesday 22 May. ",BBC,16/05/2024,"['Ex-Post Office boss Paula Vennells is set to give evidence this week as part of the inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal.', 'Ms Vennells was chief executive of the Post Office from 2012 to 2019, which included the last few years of the scandal.', 'Between 1999 and 2015, more than 900 sub-postmasters were wrongly prosecuted after faulty software said money was missing from Post Office branch accounts.', 'Despite living a relatively private life, Ms Vennells, 65, is now one of the most recognisable faces of the scandal.', 'Earlier this year, she was portrayed by actress Lia Williams in the ITV drama Mr Bates Vs The Post Office.', 'Since the programme aired, she has only been spotted once in public, refusing to answer questions from a Channel 4 reporter on whether there had been a cover-up at the Post Office, as she cycled away from a church cemetery.', 'The ITV drama also highlighted her position as an ordained priest - a role she pursued before she joined the Post Office - having trained as a Church of England deacon between 2002 and 2005 before eventually becoming ordained in 2006.', 'Ms Vennells served at several churches in Bedfordshire and was interviewed for the position of the Bishop of London in 2017.', 'She relinquished her clerical duties in 2021 but remains an ordained priest.', 'Ms Vennells grew up in the north west of England and went to the University of Bradford to study French, Russian and Economics, where she met her future husband John.', 'After graduating in 1981, she took the first step in her business career with a job at Unilever.', ""She went on to work in management positions at big brands such as Argos, Dixons, L'Oréal, Morrisons, Dunelm and Whitbread."", 'After leaving the Post Office in 2019, she acted as a non-executive board member at the Cabinet Office for a year, and also became chairman of Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust but resigned in December 2020 citing personal reasons.', 'But it is her role at the Post Office that is under scrutiny.', 'Ms Vennells joined the Post Office in 2007 as a group network director, and was promoted to chief executive in 2012, the same year that the Post Office split from Royal Mail.', 'During her time at the Post Office there were periods of financial struggle, which forced thousands of post offices across the country to close.', 'Many that remained were modernised and the Post Office went from losing millions a year to making a profit.', 'Ms Vennells was photographed visiting several of the modernised branches and meeting those who ran them.', 'In pictures, she is nearly always seen wearing her staple pearl earrings.', 'During her time leading the Post Office, Ms Vennells earned a total of £5.1m, peaking in 2018 when she took home £718,300 in salary, bonuses, pensions and other benefits.', 'Ms Vennells faced increasing criticism and scrutiny of how she dealt with the investigation into the Horizon software while she worked at the Post Office.', 'She is widely quoted as calling the Horizon computer system ""robust"".', 'The last time she spoke publicly about the scandal was nearly a decade ago, in 2015, when she was questioned by a committee of MPs.', 'Former chancellor Nadhim Zahawi was on the Commons business committee at the time, and notably played himself for free when the scene was recreated in the ITV drama.', 'He asked Ms Vennells why emails from 2009 were not given to private investigators and whether they would be.', 'Ms Vennells said: ""We have shared whatever information is appropriate.""', 'However, private investigator Ian Henderson denied that this was the case.', 'Ms Vennells stepped down from the Post Office in 2019.', 'At the start of that year she appeared on the New Years Honours List and was awarded a CBE for services to the Post Office and to charity.', 'But by December 2019, the High Court had concluded that the faulty Horizon software was to blame for shortfalls in branch accounts.', ""And as the ITV drama brought more national outrage over the Horizon scandal, this year legislation was introduced to overturn all sub-postmasters' convictions."", 'Ms Vennells handed back her CBE in January this year, saying she was listening to ""calls from sub-postmasters and others"" to return the honour.', 'Those same sub-postmasters and others will eagerly await her testimony before the inquiry, where she is scheduled to appear for three days starting on Wednesday 22 May.']",-0.0483923325126942,At the start of that year she appeared on the New Years Honours List and was awarded a CBE for services to the Post Office and to charity.,"And as the ITV drama brought more national outrage over the Horizon scandal, this year legislation was introduced to overturn all sub-postmasters' convictions.",-0.1830947756767273,"During her time leading the Post Office, Ms Vennells earned a total of £5.1m, peaking in 2018 when she took home £718,300 in salary, bonuses, pensions and other benefits.","But by December 2019, the High Court had concluded that the faulty Horizon software was to blame for shortfalls in branch accounts.",2024-05-20 London: Diplomats owe more than £143m in congestion charges,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ckrrnz2gn3po,2024-05-20T16:30:23.522Z,"Diplomats owe more than £143m to Transport for London (TfL) for unpaid congestion charges, figures reveal. The US Embassy owes the largest amount at almost £14m, the Embassy of Japan owes over £10.1m and meanwhile Togo owes £40. The figures from TfL relate to unpaid fees and fines accrued by diplomats between the launch of the congestion charge in 2003 and the end of last year. In a statement the American Embassy said it believed they were exempt from the charge claiming it is a tax. The scheme involves a £15 daily fee for driving within an area of central London between 07:00 and 18:00 on weekdays, and between noon and 18:00 on weekends and bank holidays. There are discounts and exemptions for various groups of people and vehicles, such as residents, taxis and fully electric cars. TfL said in a statement: ""We and the UK government are clear that the congestion charge is a charge for a service and not a tax. ""This means that diplomats are not exempt from paying it. ""The majority of embassies in London do pay the charge, but there remains a stubborn minority who refuse to do so, despite our representations through diplomatic channels. ""We will continue to pursue all unpaid congestion charge fees and related penalty charge notices, and are pushing for the matter to be taken up at the International Court of Justice."" The Foreign Office said that they expects diplomats to pay the charge, adding that they believed that there was no legal grounds for diplomatic exemptions. A spokesperson for the US Embassy in London said: ""In accordance with international law as reflected in the 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, our position is that the congestion charge is a tax from which diplomatic missions are exempt. ""Our long-standing position is shared by many other diplomatic missions in London.” In February 2020, then-foreign secretary Dominic Raab issued a written ministerial statement revealing that his officials had written to ""a number of diplomatic missions and international organisations"" to ""press for payment"" of money owed relating to the congestion charge, parking fines and business rates. Listen to the best of BBC Radio London on Sounds and follow BBC London on Facebook, X and Instagram. Send your story ideas to hello.bbclondon@bbc.co.uk ",BBC,20/05/2024,"['Diplomats owe more than £143m to Transport for London (TfL) for unpaid congestion charges, figures reveal.', 'The US Embassy owes the largest amount at almost £14m, the Embassy of Japan owes over £10.1m and meanwhile Togo owes £40.', 'The figures from TfL relate to unpaid fees and fines accrued by diplomats between the launch of the congestion charge in 2003 and the end of last year.', 'In a statement the American Embassy said it believed they were exempt from the charge claiming it is a tax.', 'The scheme involves a £15 daily fee for driving within an area of central London between 07:00 and 18:00 on weekdays, and between noon and 18:00 on weekends and bank holidays.', 'There are discounts and exemptions for various groups of people and vehicles, such as residents, taxis and fully electric cars.', 'TfL said in a statement: ""We and the UK government are clear that the congestion charge is a charge for a service and not a tax. ""', 'This means that diplomats are not exempt from paying it. ""', 'The majority of embassies in London do pay the charge, but there remains a stubborn minority who refuse to do so, despite our representations through diplomatic channels. ""', 'We will continue to pursue all unpaid congestion charge fees and related penalty charge notices, and are pushing for the matter to be taken up at the International Court of Justice.""', 'The Foreign Office said that they expects diplomats to pay the charge, adding that they believed that there was no legal grounds for diplomatic exemptions.', 'A spokesperson for the US Embassy in London said: ""In accordance with international law as reflected in the 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, our position is that the congestion charge is a tax from which diplomatic missions are exempt. ""', 'Our long-standing position is shared by many other diplomatic missions in London.”', 'In February 2020, then-foreign secretary Dominic Raab issued a written ministerial statement revealing that his officials had written to ""a number of diplomatic missions and international organisations"" to ""press for payment"" of money owed relating to the congestion charge, parking fines and business rates.', 'Listen to the best of BBC Radio London on Sounds and follow BBC London on Facebook, X and Instagram.', 'Send your story ideas to hello.bbclondon@bbc.co.uk']",0.0975821680803077,"Listen to the best of BBC Radio London on Sounds and follow BBC London on Facebook, X and Instagram.","The majority of embassies in London do pay the charge, but there remains a stubborn minority who refuse to do so, despite our representations through diplomatic channels. """,-0.6187453866004944,,"Diplomats owe more than £143m to Transport for London (TfL) for unpaid congestion charges, figures reveal.",2024-05-20 Post Office: Fujitsu sacked top boss at height of Horizon scandal,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-68936973,2024-05-19T00:41:54.000Z,"Fujitsu, the company that built the flawed Horizon IT system, sacked a top boss at the height of the scandal. Rod Vawdrey, 67, was dismissed as Fujitsu's global president in 2014 for personal conduct issues, former colleagues say. He returned to his native Australia, where he is now being sued for his involvement in a ""train wreck"" stock market float which made him millions. Mr Vawdrey told the BBC he wasn't involved in the Horizon project. Mr Vawdrey had responsibility for the UK operation from 2011 to 2014 - a crucial time in the Horizon scandal. If the Horizon issue was discussed by the UK board, Mr Vawdrey must have been aware of it. Companies House filings say he was executive chairman of Fujitsu Services Ltd, the UK company and sat on its audit and corporate governance committees. At this time details were beginning to emerge in public, with MPs and journalists raising concerns. But until 2013 the Post Office was still prosecuting dozens of people every year based on evidence from the flawed branch computer system. Alarm bells were ringing internally too. In 2013, a barrister warned the Post Office that a Fujitsu employee was giving incomplete evidence in court, failing to disclose information about bugs in his witness statements. This was a crucial turning point in the story, but neither Fujitsu nor the Post Office came clean about problems with Horizon until years later, piling yet more suffering on the hundreds who had been unfairly convicted. Mr Vawdrey was the only Westerner on the main Fujitsu board, with responsibility for its operations outside Japan, including the UK which was an important market. Two well-placed former colleagues of Mr Vawdrey told the BBC that he was ""terminated for cause"" by the company early in 2014. This was due to personal conduct issues, not anything related to Horizon, the sources allege, including running up too many expenses. ""Living high on the hog,"" as one put it. One described his management style as ""rumbustious"", sometimes shouting at colleagues - either a ""bulldog"" or a ""bully"", depending on which side you were on; the other source agreed. His tenure was relatively brief - a little more than two years - and Fujitsu's UK accounts show no record of a departure payment to Mr Vawdrey, unlike the multimillion-pound sums paid to departing bosses before and afterwards. Mr Vawdrey is not currently due to appear at the Horizon Inquiry, though it will hear from Duncan Tait, who was UK chief executive and reported to him. Foreign nationals can give evidence, but the Inquiry has no powers to compel them unless they return to the UK. After Fujitsu, Mr Vawdrey moved back to Australia and was involved in another public scandal, which left him a very wealthy man. After a break, Mr Vawdrey joined what was then a small Australian start-up, a software company called Nuix, and became chief executive in 2017. It was a considerable commercial success, and launched on the Australian stock exchange in December 2020, the biggest market debut of the year, and many private investors bought in. Mr Vawdrey himself took home nearly AUS$28m (£15m; $18m) in cash straight away, and was left with another AUS$8m worth of shares. However, within months the share price collapsed, leaving many investors sitting on big losses. Mr Vawdrey resigned on 15 June 2021, and the following week Australian police raided the company HQ. Last year Rolf Krolke, a former senior executive-turned-whistleblower, told an investigation by the Australian parliament that the Nuix float was a ""train wreck waiting to happen"". Nuix said it ""rejects"" his assertions. The stock exchange regulator, ASIC, is now taking Nuix and its board, including Mr Vawdrey, to court for allegedly ""breaking continuous disclosure laws"" and ""breaching their director's duties"". The case was heard last December and the court has yet to reach a decision, ASIC said. In an email statement Nuix said: ""Nuix and the relevant directors have disputed the matters which are the subject of the ASIC proceeding."" Mr Vawdrey said: ""I'm not interested in talking to journalists about [Horizon], I wasn't involved,"" and gave no further comment on the detailed allegations put to him. Fujitsu declined to comment. ",BBC,19/05/2024,"['Fujitsu, the company that built the flawed Horizon IT system, sacked a top boss at the height of the scandal.', ""Rod Vawdrey, 67, was dismissed as Fujitsu's global president in 2014 for personal conduct issues, former colleagues say."", 'He returned to his native Australia, where he is now being sued for his involvement in a ""train wreck"" stock market float which made him millions.', ""Mr Vawdrey told the BBC he wasn't involved in the Horizon project."", 'Mr Vawdrey had responsibility for the UK operation from 2011 to 2014 - a crucial time in the Horizon scandal.', 'If the Horizon issue was discussed by the UK board, Mr Vawdrey must have been aware of it.', 'Companies House filings say he was executive chairman of Fujitsu Services Ltd, the UK company and sat on its audit and corporate governance committees.', 'At this time details were beginning to emerge in public, with MPs and journalists raising concerns.', 'But until 2013 the Post Office was still prosecuting dozens of people every year based on evidence from the flawed branch computer system.', 'Alarm bells were ringing internally too.', 'In 2013, a barrister warned the Post Office that a Fujitsu employee was giving incomplete evidence in court, failing to disclose information about bugs in his witness statements.', 'This was a crucial turning point in the story, but neither Fujitsu nor the Post Office came clean about problems with Horizon until years later, piling yet more suffering on the hundreds who had been unfairly convicted.', 'Mr Vawdrey was the only Westerner on the main Fujitsu board, with responsibility for its operations outside Japan, including the UK which was an important market.', 'Two well-placed former colleagues of Mr Vawdrey told the BBC that he was ""terminated for cause"" by the company early in 2014.', 'This was due to personal conduct issues, not anything related to Horizon, the sources allege, including running up too many expenses. ""', 'Living high on the hog,"" as one put it.', 'One described his management style as ""rumbustious"", sometimes shouting at colleagues - either a ""bulldog"" or a ""bully"", depending on which side you were on; the other source agreed.', ""His tenure was relatively brief - a little more than two years - and Fujitsu's UK accounts show no record of a departure payment to Mr Vawdrey, unlike the multimillion-pound sums paid to departing bosses before and afterwards."", 'Mr Vawdrey is not currently due to appear at the Horizon Inquiry, though it will hear from Duncan Tait, who was UK chief executive and reported to him.', 'Foreign nationals can give evidence, but the Inquiry has no powers to compel them unless they return to the UK.', 'After Fujitsu, Mr Vawdrey moved back to Australia and was involved in another public scandal, which left him a very wealthy man.', 'After a break, Mr Vawdrey joined what was then a small Australian start-up, a software company called Nuix, and became chief executive in 2017.', 'It was a considerable commercial success, and launched on the Australian stock exchange in December 2020, the biggest market debut of the year, and many private investors bought in.', 'Mr Vawdrey himself took home nearly AUS$28m (£15m; $18m) in cash straight away, and was left with another AUS$8m worth of shares.', 'However, within months the share price collapsed, leaving many investors sitting on big losses.', 'Mr Vawdrey resigned on 15 June 2021, and the following week Australian police raided the company HQ.', 'Last year Rolf Krolke, a former senior executive-turned-whistleblower, told an investigation by the Australian parliament that the Nuix float was a ""train wreck waiting to happen"".', 'Nuix said it ""rejects"" his assertions.', 'The stock exchange regulator, ASIC, is now taking Nuix and its board, including Mr Vawdrey, to court for allegedly ""breaking continuous disclosure laws"" and ""breaching their director\'s duties"".', 'The case was heard last December and the court has yet to reach a decision, ASIC said.', 'In an email statement Nuix said: ""Nuix and the relevant directors have disputed the matters which are the subject of the ASIC proceeding.""', 'Mr Vawdrey said: ""I\'m not interested in talking to journalists about [Horizon], I wasn\'t involved,"" and gave no further comment on the detailed allegations put to him.', 'Fujitsu declined to comment.']",-0.1601193328755878,"It was a considerable commercial success, and launched on the Australian stock exchange in December 2020, the biggest market debut of the year, and many private investors bought in.","This was a crucial turning point in the story, but neither Fujitsu nor the Post Office came clean about problems with Horizon until years later, piling yet more suffering on the hundreds who had been unfairly convicted.",-0.5856678996767316,"It was a considerable commercial success, and launched on the Australian stock exchange in December 2020, the biggest market debut of the year, and many private investors bought in.","However, within months the share price collapsed, leaving many investors sitting on big losses.",2024-05-20 Bubble tea bubble: Why investors are snubbing the popular drink,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cw4rp8ejevlo,2024-05-16T23:58:43.400Z,"From its origins in 1980s Taiwan to today's global craze, bubble tea or boba, has come a long way. Ask people under the age of 40 anywhere in the world whether they have ever tried the milky tea and tapioca ball concoction and there's a pretty good chance that they have. Bubble tea has certainly hit a sweet spot with its many fans but it has left some investors with a bitter taste. Stock market debuts of two China-based chains have already flopped. And there are at least two more share sales in the pipeline. Despite these hiccups, it's undeniable that boba has become a global phenomenon after its popularity spread from Asia to the West. From London to Helsinki and Buenos Aires to Cape Town, it's almost impossible to find a major city where it isn't on sale. There are now an estimated half a million bubble tea shops in China alone - a huge market for the drink, and one not too far from its origins in Taiwan. Thirty-something university lecturer Lili, who lives in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, first began drinking it while she was in primary school. Today she cannot go long without her fix. ""Bubble tea is an easy-to-get pleasure so I drink it quite often,"" she says. Tina, an office worker from Beijing also in her 30s, tells a similar story. She first tried boba when she was a child and now drinks it several times a week. She often makes group orders with co-workers and friends from a wide variety of well-known shops. Lili, Tina and millions of others like them have helped China's bubble tea businesses grow into a nationwide industry that last year was worth about 145 billion yuan ($20bn; £15.9bn), according to estimates by the China Chain Store & Franchise Association. Innovation has been a key to its success ""with new flavours and recipes constantly being launched"", according to Jason Yu at consumer research group Kantar Worldpanel. It's a strategy that resonates with Lili who says ""promotion campaigns, brand collaborations and new flavours"" have kept her going back for more. That approach has also helped bubble tea chains expand beyond China's major cities, Mr Yu says. This success story has continued even at a time when China's economy is slowing and consumers are tightening their belts. Bubble tea ""provides very much an affordable pleasure to consumers in China"", said Mr Yu, pointing to the ""wide price range"" of products being offered by different bubble tea chains. Some investors, however, have not shown the same level of enthusiasm. Seeking to cash in on the craze, several Chinese tea chains have looked to sell shares to the public in recent years. Last month, China's third largest bubble tea chain, Sichuan Baicha Baidao Industrial, known as Chabaidao, made its stock market debut. The shares plunged on their first day of trade and have yet to recover. That followed another disappointing debut by Shenzhen-based Nayuki. Its shares have lost more than 80% of their value since their launch in Hong Kong almost three years ago. Analysts point to a number of reasons for these weak performances, including concerns about the Hong Kong stock market as a whole. The amount raised from new listings in the city since the start of this year has dropped to levels not seen since 2009, according to consultancy firm Deloitte. But this hasn't discouraged other bubble tea chains from planning their own share sales. Earlier this year, China's first and second largest chains by number of shops - Mixue Group and Guming Holdings - submitted applications to list on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. ""Persisting weak market sentiment in Hong Kong is the primary reason"" for Chabaidao's market blunder, said Gary Ng, a senior economist at Natixis. He believes the city will struggle to attract new listings until there ""is a clear sign of China’s pivot to growth and lower US interest rates"". Others, however, say investors are focusing on problems within the bubble tea industry itself. It ""has relatively low barriers to entry, leading to increased competition,"" said Kenny Ng, Securities Strategist of Everbright Securities International. ""Many companies rely on opening new stores to sustain revenue growth. However, this expansion strategy can lead to a decline in gross profit margins as companies face higher costs associated with store operations and management."" For bubble tea fans, growing competition has its advantages. Han is a regular boba drinker from Beijing who used to stay away from certain premium brands because she found them too expensive. That has changed. She says price has become less of a factor when choosing between different brands because ""they have a lot of discounts and vouchers"". But for bubble tea makers and their potential investors, lower prices and higher costs could prove to be an unattractive recipe. ""The Chabaidao case highlights the risks and does not bode well for the listings of other bubble tea chains,"" warned Gary Ng. Lili and Han say there is another far more important risk associated with the often sugar-packed drink that is holding them back from ordering more - putting on weight. ",BBC,16/05/2024,"[""From its origins in 1980s Taiwan to today's global craze, bubble tea or boba, has come a long way."", ""Ask people under the age of 40 anywhere in the world whether they have ever tried the milky tea and tapioca ball concoction and there's a pretty good chance that they have."", 'Bubble tea has certainly hit a sweet spot with its many fans but it has left some investors with a bitter taste.', 'Stock market debuts of two China-based chains have already flopped.', 'And there are at least two more share sales in the pipeline.', ""Despite these hiccups, it's undeniable that boba has become a global phenomenon after its popularity spread from Asia to the West."", ""From London to Helsinki and Buenos Aires to Cape Town, it's almost impossible to find a major city where it isn't on sale."", 'There are now an estimated half a million bubble tea shops in China alone - a huge market for the drink, and one not too far from its origins in Taiwan.', 'Thirty-something university lecturer Lili, who lives in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, first began drinking it while she was in primary school.', 'Today she cannot go long without her fix. ""', 'Bubble tea is an easy-to-get pleasure so I drink it quite often,"" she says.', 'Tina, an office worker from Beijing also in her 30s, tells a similar story.', 'She first tried boba when she was a child and now drinks it several times a week.', 'She often makes group orders with co-workers and friends from a wide variety of well-known shops.', ""Lili, Tina and millions of others like them have helped China's bubble tea businesses grow into a nationwide industry that last year was worth about 145 billion yuan ($20bn; £15.9bn), according to estimates by the China Chain Store & Franchise Association."", 'Innovation has been a key to its success ""with new flavours and recipes constantly being launched"", according to Jason Yu at consumer research group Kantar Worldpanel.', 'It\'s a strategy that resonates with Lili who says ""promotion campaigns, brand collaborations and new flavours"" have kept her going back for more.', ""That approach has also helped bubble tea chains expand beyond China's major cities, Mr Yu says."", ""This success story has continued even at a time when China's economy is slowing and consumers are tightening their belts."", 'Bubble tea ""provides very much an affordable pleasure to consumers in China"", said Mr Yu, pointing to the ""wide price range"" of products being offered by different bubble tea chains.', 'Some investors, however, have not shown the same level of enthusiasm.', 'Seeking to cash in on the craze, several Chinese tea chains have looked to sell shares to the public in recent years.', ""Last month, China's third largest bubble tea chain, Sichuan Baicha Baidao Industrial, known as Chabaidao, made its stock market debut."", 'The shares plunged on their first day of trade and have yet to recover.', 'That followed another disappointing debut by Shenzhen-based Nayuki.', 'Its shares have lost more than 80% of their value since their launch in Hong Kong almost three years ago.', 'Analysts point to a number of reasons for these weak performances, including concerns about the Hong Kong stock market as a whole.', 'The amount raised from new listings in the city since the start of this year has dropped to levels not seen since 2009, according to consultancy firm Deloitte.', ""But this hasn't discouraged other bubble tea chains from planning their own share sales."", 'Earlier this year, China\'s first and second largest chains by number of shops - Mixue Group and Guming Holdings - submitted applications to list on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. ""', 'Persisting weak market sentiment in Hong Kong is the primary reason"" for Chabaidao\'s market blunder, said Gary Ng, a senior economist at Natixis.', 'He believes the city will struggle to attract new listings until there ""is a clear sign of China’s pivot to growth and lower US interest rates"".', 'Others, however, say investors are focusing on problems within the bubble tea industry itself.', 'It ""has relatively low barriers to entry, leading to increased competition,"" said Kenny Ng, Securities Strategist of Everbright Securities International. ""', 'Many companies rely on opening new stores to sustain revenue growth.', 'However, this expansion strategy can lead to a decline in gross profit margins as companies face higher costs associated with store operations and management.""', 'For bubble tea fans, growing competition has its advantages.', 'Han is a regular boba drinker from Beijing who used to stay away from certain premium brands because she found them too expensive.', 'That has changed.', 'She says price has become less of a factor when choosing between different brands because ""they have a lot of discounts and vouchers"".', 'But for bubble tea makers and their potential investors, lower prices and higher costs could prove to be an unattractive recipe. ""', 'The Chabaidao case highlights the risks and does not bode well for the listings of other bubble tea chains,"" warned Gary Ng.', 'Lili and Han say there is another far more important risk associated with the often sugar-packed drink that is holding them back from ordering more - putting on weight.']",0.1338541877305695,Ask people under the age of 40 anywhere in the world whether they have ever tried the milky tea and tapioca ball concoction and there's a pretty good chance that they have.,"But for bubble tea makers and their potential investors, lower prices and higher costs could prove to be an unattractive recipe. """,-0.0212943541506926,"That approach has also helped bubble tea chains expand beyond China's major cities, Mr Yu says.","However, this expansion strategy can lead to a decline in gross profit margins as companies face higher costs associated with store operations and management.""",2024-05-20 The rise and fall of Canada's 'Crypto King' Aiden Pleterski,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-69023845,2024-05-16T22:09:27.000Z,"In December 2022, in the middle of the night, 25-year-old Aiden Pleterski was kidnapped in downtown Toronto. His captors released the self-proclaimed ""Crypto King"" after three days but under threat - Mr Pleterski had to come up with some money, fast, according to court documents. ""I'm sorry, I really am, I didn't want to or mean to ruin anyone's life,"" a bruised and bloodied Mr Pleterski is seen saying in a video obtained by CBC News. His lawyer later said the video was filmed during the kidnapping. It wasn't the first - or last - trouble for the young Canadian man who billed himself as a crypto whiz promising ""savvy investments"". This week, following a 16-month investigation, Ontario police and the provincial securities commission announced Mr Pleterski had been charged with fraud over C$5,000 ($3,600; £2,900) and for laundering the proceeds of crime. Police also charged another man, Colin Murphy, 27, allegedly an associate of Mr Pleterski's. The investigation, dubbed ""Project Swan"" by authorities, is believed to be the largest fraud case ever in the region, Durham Regional Police Chief Peter Moreira said on Thursday. It involved interviews with ""a large number"" of victims, over three dozen court orders and thousands of pages of financial documents, he said. Mr Pleterski was not registered ""in any capacity"" with any Canadian securities regulator, said Stephen Henkel, with the Ontario Securities Commission. Authorities said Mr Pleterski may have solicited investors as recently as February 2024. If convicted, he could face up to 14 years behind bars. None of the allegations against Mr Pleterski have been tested in court. Announcing the charges on Thursday, Ontario authorities were tight-lipped about the details of their case, citing a publication ban surrounding the case. But according to ongoing bankruptcy proceedings, Mr Pleterski had raised some C$41.5m from investors, promising to invest in cryptocurrency and foreign markets. He invested only 1.6% of that sum - while spending millions on luxury cars, flights on private jets and lakefront mansions, according to court documents. Mr Pleterski was still in high school when he began dabbling in cryptocurrency, using it to make purchases in video games like Call of Duty. At the same time, he started noticing people ""posting luxury cars, posting luxury lifestyles"" on social media, he said during an interview for his bankruptcy case. Mr Pleterski looked into it and found many said they made their money from cryptocurrency investments. ""That's what sparked my interest,"" he said. By 2020, Mr Pleterski began investing, starting with a few thousand dollars from family members and some money from his work as a baseball umpire. By December of that year, he had moved into his own rental home, paying C$9,000 each month with income from his trading plus a ""couple thousand dollars"" from a government emergency benefit for people hurt financially by the Covid-19 pandemic. A few months later, he had moved again - into a multi-million dollar five-bedroom mansion in Burlington, 50km (30 miles) south of Toronto. That same year, his own parents wanted to invest and gave him a sum of C$50,000, according to court documents. Mr Pleterski gave his parents a return on their investment, they said, in addition to luxury gifts - a McLaren 60LT and BMW M8 for his dad, a Louis Vuitton bag and Burberry coat for his mother, and a 2017 Bentley Bentayga for the couple's wedding anniversary. Dragan and Kathy Pleterski told lawyers with Grant Thornton, an accounting firm and the appointed trustee in the bankruptcy case, they believed their son was ""operating a successful investment business"". All the while, he was cultivating the kind of social media presence that had first sparked his interest in investing. Mr Pleterski posted photos of himself on private jets, on holiday in Miami and the Bahamas, and of a driveway filled with luxury cars. ""Where will life bring me next?"" he wrote in one caption. But by April 2022, cracks in Mr Pleterski's lavish life began to show. Lawsuits brought by investors began piling up, with allegations he had misappropriated their money. From there, it was a slow drip. In July, Ontario's Superior Court ordered Mr Pleterski's assets frozen. In August, the court ordered him and his company into bankruptcy. Then, in December, came the alleged kidnapping. Last summer, Toronto police arrested five suspects on kidnapping for ransom and other charges, including one man who had invested funds with Mr Pleterski, court documents say. The new owners of Mr Pleterski's Burlington mansion also faced threats. Canadian NBA star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and his partner Hailey Summers fled the property after a man showed up and demanded to know where Mr Pleterski was. After the couple reported the incident, police said they had received previous reports of attempted break-ins at the property. ""Ms Summers and Mr Gilgeous-Alexander were sufficiently alarmed by this news that they moved out of their newly purchased dream house, never to return,"" their lawyer said in court documents. The couple later won a lawsuit voiding the purchase of the home. For his part, Mr Pleterski made what appeared to be one of his first public references to the saga on Thursday, posting a simple Instagram story thanking his followers for standing by him. ""So many of you guys are supportive, y'all are amazing,"" he wrote. ",BBC,16/05/2024,"['In December 2022, in the middle of the night, 25-year-old Aiden Pleterski was kidnapped in downtown Toronto.', 'His captors released the self-proclaimed ""Crypto King"" after three days but under threat - Mr Pleterski had to come up with some money, fast, according to court documents. ""', 'I\'m sorry, I really am, I didn\'t want to or mean to ruin anyone\'s life,"" a bruised and bloodied Mr Pleterski is seen saying in a video obtained by CBC News.', 'His lawyer later said the video was filmed during the kidnapping.', 'It wasn\'t the first - or last - trouble for the young Canadian man who billed himself as a crypto whiz promising ""savvy investments"".', 'This week, following a 16-month investigation, Ontario police and the provincial securities commission announced Mr Pleterski had been charged with fraud over C$5,000 ($3,600; £2,900) and for laundering the proceeds of crime.', ""Police also charged another man, Colin Murphy, 27, allegedly an associate of Mr Pleterski's."", 'The investigation, dubbed ""Project Swan"" by authorities, is believed to be the largest fraud case ever in the region, Durham Regional Police Chief Peter Moreira said on Thursday.', 'It involved interviews with ""a large number"" of victims, over three dozen court orders and thousands of pages of financial documents, he said.', 'Mr Pleterski was not registered ""in any capacity"" with any Canadian securities regulator, said Stephen Henkel, with the Ontario Securities Commission.', 'Authorities said Mr Pleterski may have solicited investors as recently as February 2024.', 'If convicted, he could face up to 14 years behind bars.', 'None of the allegations against Mr Pleterski have been tested in court.', 'Announcing the charges on Thursday, Ontario authorities were tight-lipped about the details of their case, citing a publication ban surrounding the case.', 'But according to ongoing bankruptcy proceedings, Mr Pleterski had raised some C$41.5m from investors, promising to invest in cryptocurrency and foreign markets.', 'He invested only 1.6% of that sum - while spending millions on luxury cars, flights on private jets and lakefront mansions, according to court documents.', 'Mr Pleterski was still in high school when he began dabbling in cryptocurrency, using it to make purchases in video games like Call of Duty.', 'At the same time, he started noticing people ""posting luxury cars, posting luxury lifestyles"" on social media, he said during an interview for his bankruptcy case.', 'Mr Pleterski looked into it and found many said they made their money from cryptocurrency investments. ""', 'That\'s what sparked my interest,"" he said.', 'By 2020, Mr Pleterski began investing, starting with a few thousand dollars from family members and some money from his work as a baseball umpire.', 'By December of that year, he had moved into his own rental home, paying C$9,000 each month with income from his trading plus a ""couple thousand dollars"" from a government emergency benefit for people hurt financially by the Covid-19 pandemic.', 'A few months later, he had moved again - into a multi-million dollar five-bedroom mansion in Burlington, 50km (30 miles) south of Toronto.', 'That same year, his own parents wanted to invest and gave him a sum of C$50,000, according to court documents.', ""Mr Pleterski gave his parents a return on their investment, they said, in addition to luxury gifts - a McLaren 60LT and BMW M8 for his dad, a Louis Vuitton bag and Burberry coat for his mother, and a 2017 Bentley Bentayga for the couple's wedding anniversary."", 'Dragan and Kathy Pleterski told lawyers with Grant Thornton, an accounting firm and the appointed trustee in the bankruptcy case, they believed their son was ""operating a successful investment business"".', 'All the while, he was cultivating the kind of social media presence that had first sparked his interest in investing.', 'Mr Pleterski posted photos of himself on private jets, on holiday in Miami and the Bahamas, and of a driveway filled with luxury cars. ""', 'Where will life bring me next?""', 'he wrote in one caption.', ""But by April 2022, cracks in Mr Pleterski's lavish life began to show."", 'Lawsuits brought by investors began piling up, with allegations he had misappropriated their money.', 'From there, it was a slow drip.', ""In July, Ontario's Superior Court ordered Mr Pleterski's assets frozen."", 'In August, the court ordered him and his company into bankruptcy.', 'Then, in December, came the alleged kidnapping.', 'Last summer, Toronto police arrested five suspects on kidnapping for ransom and other charges, including one man who had invested funds with Mr Pleterski, court documents say.', ""The new owners of Mr Pleterski's Burlington mansion also faced threats."", 'Canadian NBA star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and his partner Hailey Summers fled the property after a man showed up and demanded to know where Mr Pleterski was.', 'After the couple reported the incident, police said they had received previous reports of attempted break-ins at the property. ""', 'Ms Summers and Mr Gilgeous-Alexander were sufficiently alarmed by this news that they moved out of their newly purchased dream house, never to return,"" their lawyer said in court documents.', 'The couple later won a lawsuit voiding the purchase of the home.', 'For his part, Mr Pleterski made what appeared to be one of his first public references to the saga on Thursday, posting a simple Instagram story thanking his followers for standing by him. ""', 'So many of you guys are supportive, y\'all are amazing,"" he wrote.']",0.0047325670978228,"Dragan and Kathy Pleterski told lawyers with Grant Thornton, an accounting firm and the appointed trustee in the bankruptcy case, they believed their son was ""operating a successful investment business"".","This week, following a 16-month investigation, Ontario police and the provincial securities commission announced Mr Pleterski had been charged with fraud over C$5,000 ($3,600; £2,900) and for laundering the proceeds of crime.",0.2680489553345574,"Mr Pleterski gave his parents a return on their investment, they said, in addition to luxury gifts - a McLaren 60LT and BMW M8 for his dad, a Louis Vuitton bag and Burberry coat for his mother, and a 2017 Bentley Bentayga for the couple's wedding anniversary.","Ms Summers and Mr Gilgeous-Alexander were sufficiently alarmed by this news that they moved out of their newly purchased dream house, never to return,"" their lawyer said in court documents.",2024-05-20 "Boeing supplier Spirit AeroSystems lays off workers, citing lower plane delivery rates",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/spirit-aerosystems-layoffs.html,2024-05-16T20:17:00+0000,"In this articleAerospace supplier Spirit AeroSystems on Thursday said it will lay off some of its workers because of slower delivery rates on commercial aircraft as it struggles with a slowdown at its biggest commercial airplane customer, Boeing.Spirit AeroSystems told staff in a memo, reported earlier by Wichita-based KSN, that it would cut about 400 to 450 hourly employees.""We are committed to implementing this transition in as compassionate a manner as possible,"" Spirit AeroSystems said in a statement.About 12,600 people worked at the Wichita facility as of the end of 2023, according to the company's annual filing.Spirit AeroSystems makes fuselages at the plant for Boeing's bestselling 737 Max plane, deliveries of which have slowed in the wake of a door panel blowout and resulting safety crisis at Boeing.Last week, Spirit AeroSystems said first-quarter Boeing deliveries decreased 31% from the same period in 2023, and said overall deliveries were down 11.3%.It reported a quarterly loss of $616.7 million for the first three months of the year. The company has struggled financially in recent years and was last profitable in 2019. The company is also in talks to be acquired by Boeing, which it spun off from in 2005. About 70% of Spirit AeroSystems' revenue last year came from Boeing, although the company also makes parts for Boeing's rival Airbus.Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun told CNBC in an interview in April 2024 that it is ""more than likely"" that the companies reach a deal during the second quarter.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"['In this articleAerospace supplier Spirit AeroSystems on Thursday said it will lay off some of its workers because of slower delivery rates on commercial aircraft as it struggles with a slowdown at its biggest commercial airplane customer, Boeing.', 'Spirit AeroSystems told staff in a memo, reported earlier by Wichita-based KSN, that it would cut about 400 to 450 hourly employees.', '""We are committed to implementing this transition in as compassionate a manner as possible,"" Spirit AeroSystems said in a statement.', ""About 12,600 people worked at the Wichita facility as of the end of 2023, according to the company's annual filing."", ""Spirit AeroSystems makes fuselages at the plant for Boeing's bestselling 737 Max plane, deliveries of which have slowed in the wake of a door panel blowout and resulting safety crisis at Boeing."", 'Last week, Spirit AeroSystems said first-quarter Boeing deliveries decreased 31% from the same period in 2023, and said overall deliveries were down 11.3%.It reported a quarterly loss of $616.7 million for the first three months of the year.', 'The company has struggled financially in recent years and was last profitable in 2019.The company is also in talks to be acquired by Boeing, which it spun off from in 2005.', ""About 70% of Spirit AeroSystems' revenue last year came from Boeing, although the company also makes parts for Boeing's rival Airbus."", 'Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun told CNBC in an interview in April 2024 that it is ""more than likely"" that the companies reach a deal during the second quarter.']",0.0487687692160598,"""We are committed to implementing this transition in as compassionate a manner as possible,"" Spirit AeroSystems said in a statement.","In this articleAerospace supplier Spirit AeroSystems on Thursday said it will lay off some of its workers because of slower delivery rates on commercial aircraft as it struggles with a slowdown at its biggest commercial airplane customer, Boeing.",-0.9941206216812134,,"Last week, Spirit AeroSystems said first-quarter Boeing deliveries decreased 31% from the same period in 2023, and said overall deliveries were down 11.3%.It reported a quarterly loss of $616.7 million for the first three months of the year.",2024-05-19 "United Airlines says FAA cleared it to start adding new aircraft, routes after safety review",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/faa-clears-united-airlines-after-safety-review.html,2024-05-16T19:26:52+0000,"In this articleUnited Airlines said the Federal Aviation Administration has cleared it to start adding new aircraft and routes months after the regulator stepped up its scrutiny of the carrier following several safety incidents.""Today, we got some good news: after a careful review and discussion about the proactive safety steps United has taken to date, our FAA Certificate Management Office has allowed us to begin the process of restarting our certification activities, including new aircraft and routes, and we will continue to coordinate closely with the FAA,"" United said in a note to employees Wednesday.United said in March that the FAA had stepped up scrutiny of the airline after a spate of incidents earlier this year. That prevented it from launching new routes, including flights to Faro, Portugal, ahead of the busy summer travel season.United said that it has more work to do, however.""We will continue to see an FAA presence in our operation as they review our work processes, manuals and facilities,"" it said in its employee memo.United would send requests to the FAA to add aircrafts or new routes, though a spokesperson said it has yet to do so. The FAA said later Thursday that it has not yet ""approved any expansion of United Airlines' routes or fleets."" The FAA said its review is ""ongoing and safety will determine the timeline for completing it.""A clearance from the FAA would be welcome news as United and other carriers expect a record peak season this year.Among the safety incidents in recent months, a Japan-bound United Boeing 777 lost a tire shortly after takeoff from San Francisco in February, and a missing panel was discovered on a Boeing 737 after it landed in Oregon in March.While the planes involved older jets, the incidents come amid heightened scrutiny of the aviation industry after a door plug blew out of a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines earlier this year, a near catastrophe that has created a fresh crisis for the manufacturer.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"['In this articleUnited Airlines said the Federal Aviation Administration has cleared it to start adding new aircraft and routes months after the regulator stepped up its scrutiny of the carrier following several safety incidents.', '""Today, we got some good news: after a careful review and discussion about the proactive safety steps United has taken to date, our FAA Certificate Management Office has allowed us to begin the process of restarting our certification activities, including new aircraft and routes, and we will continue to coordinate closely with the FAA,"" United said in a note to employees Wednesday.', 'United said in March that the FAA had stepped up scrutiny of the airline after a spate of incidents earlier this year.', 'That prevented it from launching new routes, including flights to Faro, Portugal, ahead of the busy summer travel season.', 'United said that it has more work to do, however.', '""We will continue to see an FAA presence in our operation as they review our work processes, manuals and facilities,"" it said in its employee memo.', 'United would send requests to the FAA to add aircrafts or new routes, though a spokesperson said it has yet to do so.', 'The FAA said later Thursday that it has not yet ""approved any expansion of UnitedAirlines\' routes or fleets.""', 'The FAA said its review is ""ongoing and safety will determine the timeline for completing it.', '""A clearance from the FAA would be welcome news as United and other carriers expect a record peak season this year.', 'Among the safety incidents in recent months, a Japan-bound United Boeing 777 lost a tire shortly after takeoff from San Francisco in February, and a missing panel was discovered on a Boeing 737 after it landed in Oregon in March.', 'While the planes involved older jets, the incidents come amid heightened scrutiny of the aviation industry after a door plug blew out of a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines earlier this year, a near catastrophe that has created a fresh crisis for the manufacturer.']",0.2539566092965166,"""Today, we got some good news: after a careful review and discussion about the proactive safety steps United has taken to date, our FAA Certificate Management Office has allowed us to begin the process of restarting our certification activities, including new aircraft and routes, and we will continue to coordinate closely with the FAA,"" United said in a note to employees Wednesday.","While the planes involved older jets, the incidents come amid heightened scrutiny of the aviation industry after a door plug blew out of a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines earlier this year, a near catastrophe that has created a fresh crisis for the manufacturer.",0.1512451086725507,"""A clearance from the FAA would be welcome news as United and other carriers expect a record peak season this year.","While the planes involved older jets, the incidents come amid heightened scrutiny of the aviation industry after a door plug blew out of a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines earlier this year, a near catastrophe that has created a fresh crisis for the manufacturer.",2024-05-19 Netflix to stream Christmas Day NFL games for three years,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/15/netflix-to-stream-holiday-nfl-games-for-three-years.html,2024-05-15T20:54:37+0000,"In this articleNetflix will stream Christmas Day National Football League games for the next three years, in its first true step into live sports.The streaming platform will show two games on Christmas Day this year, followed by at least one matchup in both 2025 and 2026, the league announced Wednesday. The games will continue to be available on broadcast TV in local team markets and on the NFL+ mobile app.Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but people familiar with the matter said Netflix will pay in the ballpark of $75 million per game. Spokespeople for the NFL and Netflix declined to comment. The streamer will hire its own announcers for the games and partner with existing production companies. Sarandos told CNBC he felt the NFL was the right fit because it matched the streamer's event strategy, allowing Netflix to effectively own the day.Netflix has drawn large audiences with sports programming, from the ""Formula 1: Drive to Survive"" documentary to its ""Quarterback"" series following NFL signal callers. While the company took major strides into live programming with a deal to stream the WWE's ""Raw"" and a boxing fight between Mike Tyson and Jake Paul, the company suggested it had not found a live sports rights strategy that worked for it.""We have not seen a profit path to renting big sports,"" Sarandos said in December 2022.""We're not anti-sports, we're just pro-profit,"" Sarandos said.Now, Netflix will stream games for the most-watched U.S. sports league, at a time when it is trying to boost profits by raising subscription prices, pushing users toward an ad-tier membership and cracking down on password sharing.The games could give Netflix a major draw for advertisers. The three Christmas Day NFL games averaged 28.68 million viewers last year, according to Sports Media Watch.The Christmas Day matchups can function as a marketing ramp up for Netflix before it starts airing ""Raw"" in January.The streaming giant's forays into live events have not come without issues. Its live reunion event for the hit reality TV show ""Love Is Blind"" in April 2023 had a technical bug that delayed the stream for more than an hour, at which point the show was no longer live.The announcement comes as streamers across the industry show increasing interest in live sports programming, particularly the NFL.In January, NBCUniversal's Peacock showed an NFL Wild Card game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Miami Dolphins, marking the first time a playoff game was broadcast exclusively on a streaming service. Amazon's Prime Video has already snatched the exclusive rights to an NFL playoff game next season.Amazon also signed a media rights deal with the NFL in 2021, where it agreed to pay about $1 billion per year to have exclusive Thursday Night Football rights for 10 years, starting with the 2023 season. The deal was the first time a streaming service carried a full package of games exclusively.Netflix could be looking to branch out into basketball, as well. CNBC reported last year that Netflix, along with Amazon, Apple, YouTube TV and Comcast's NBCUniversal/Peacock, have all had preliminary conversations with the National Basketball Association about possible interest in media rights when the league's deal with Walt Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery comes to an end after next season.Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.— CNBC's Alex Sherman and Lillian Rizzo contributed to this report",CNBC,15/05/2024,"['In this articleNetflix will stream Christmas Day National Football League games for the next three years, in its first true step into live sports.', 'The streaming platform will show two games on Christmas Day this year, followed by at least one matchup in both 2025 and 2026, the league announced Wednesday.', 'The games will continue to be available on broadcast TV in local team markets and on the NFL+ mobile app.', 'Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but people familiar with the matter said Netflix will pay in the ballpark of $75 million per game.', 'Spokespeople for the NFL and Netflix declined to comment.', 'The streamer will hire its own announcers for the games and partner with existing production companies.', ""Sarandos told CNBC he felt the NFL was the right fit because it matched the streamer's event strategy, allowing Netflix to effectively own the day."", 'Netflix has drawn large audiences with sports programming, from the ""Formula 1: Drive to Survive"" documentary to its ""Quarterback"" series following NFL signal callers.', 'While the company took major strides into live programming with a deal to stream the WWE\'s ""Raw"" and a boxing fight between Mike Tyson and Jake Paul, the company suggested it had not found a live sports rights strategy that worked for it.', '""We have not seen a profit path to renting big sports,"" Sarandos said in December 2022.""We\'re not anti-sports, we\'re just pro-profit,"" Sarandos said.', 'Now, Netflix will stream games for the most-watched U.S. sports league, at a time when it is trying to boost profits by raising subscription prices, pushing users toward an ad-tier membership and cracking down on password sharing.', 'The games could give Netflix a major draw for advertisers.', 'The three Christmas Day NFL games averaged 28.68 million viewers last year, according to Sports Media Watch.', 'The Christmas Day matchups can function as a marketing ramp up for Netflix before it starts airing ""Raw"" in January.', ""The streaming giant's forays into live events have not come without issues."", 'Its live reunion event for the hit reality TV show ""Love Is Blind"" in April 2023 had a technical bug that delayed the stream for more than an hour, at which point the show was no longer live.', ""The announcement comes as streamers across the industry show increasing interest in live sports programming, particularly the NFL.In January, NBCUniversal's Peacock showed an NFL Wild Card game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Miami Dolphins, marking the first time a playoff game was broadcast exclusively on a streaming service."", ""Amazon's Prime Video has already snatched the exclusive rights to an NFL playoff game next season."", 'Amazon also signed a media rights deal with the NFL in 2021, where it agreed to pay about $1 billion per year to have exclusive Thursday Night Football rights for 10 years, starting with the 2023 season.', 'The deal was the first time a streaming service carried a full package of games exclusively.', 'Netflix could be looking to branch out into basketball, as well.', ""CNBC reported last year that Netflix, along with Amazon, Apple, YouTube TV and Comcast's NBCUniversal/Peacock, have all had preliminary conversations with the National Basketball Association about possible interest in media rights when the league's deal with Walt Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery comes to an end after next season."", 'Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.—', ""CNBC's Alex Sherman and Lillian Rizzo contributed to this report""]",0.1514868578989201,"Now, Netflix will stream games for the most-watched U.S. sports league, at a time when it is trying to boost profits by raising subscription prices, pushing users toward an ad-tier membership and cracking down on password sharing.","While the company took major strides into live programming with a deal to stream the WWE's ""Raw"" and a boxing fight between Mike Tyson and Jake Paul, the company suggested it had not found a live sports rights strategy that worked for it.",0.5904160678386688,The games could give Netflix a major draw for advertisers.,"""We have not seen a profit path to renting big sports,"" Sarandos said in December 2022.""We're not anti-sports, we're just pro-profit,"" Sarandos said.",2024-05-19 Under Armour is laying off workers as retailer says North America sales will plunge this year,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/under-armour-uaa-earnings-q4-2024.html,2024-05-16T20:14:41+0000,"In this articleUnder Armour announced a broad restructuring plan on Thursday as it said sales in its largest market, North America, plunged 10% and predicted the trend will get worse throughout its current fiscal year. The athletic apparel retailer also saw profits sink by more than 96% during its fiscal fourth quarter, compared with the year-ago period. It's unclear how many employees Under Armour will lay off as part of the restructuring, but the plan is expected to cost between $70 million and $90 million, a portion of which will be used for employee severance and benefits costs. The company declined to share more information with CNBC about its restructuring.The company's shares initially plunged double digits in pre-market trading after its earnings report was released, but later rebounded after its earnings call with Wall Street analysts. Shares closed more than 1% lower. Here's how the athletic apparel retailer did in its fiscal fourth quarter compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:The company's reported net income for the three-month period that ended March 31 was $6.6 million, or 2 cents per share, compared with $170.6 million, or 38 cents per share, a year earlier. Excluding one-time items, the company reported earnings of 11 cents per share. Sales dropped to $1.33 billion, down about 5% from $1.4 billion a year earlier. During the quarter, sales in North America declined 10% to $772 million, worse than the $780 million that analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount. Under Armour said it expects sales to continue to worsen in North America. The company anticipates they will drop between 15% and 17% in its current fiscal year. ""Due to a confluence of factors, including lower wholesale channel demand and inconsistent execution across our business, we are seizing this critical moment to make proactive decisions to build a premium positioning for our brand, which will pressure our top and bottom line in the near term,"" founder and CEO Kevin Plank said in a statement. ""Over the next 18 months, there is a significant opportunity to reconstitute Under Armour's brand strength through achieving more, by doing less and focusing on our core fundamentals,"" he added.Across Under Armour's business, the company is expecting revenue to be down ""at a low-double-digit percentage rate"" in its current fiscal year, while analysts had expected sales to grow by 2.1%, according to LSEG. The company is planning to cut down on promotions and discounting, which it expects will lead its gross margin to rise between 0.75 and 1 percentage point for the fiscal year. It's expecting diluted earnings per share to be between 2 cents and 5 cents and adjusted diluted earnings per share to be between 18 cents and 21 cents for the year. Analysts had expected earnings per share of 52 cents, according to LSEG. Under Armour's rough quarter comes about two months after the retailer announced former Marriott executive Stephanie Linnartz would be stepping down from her role as CEO after barely a year on the job and Plank would once again take the helm of the company he founded in 1996. Linnartz was the second CEO the company has cycled through in less than two years. During a call with analysts, Plank was blunt about where things had gone wrong for Under Armour. He pointed to inconsistent leadership as one of the primary issues.""With several CEOs and heads of products, marketing and North America over the past half decade, ongoing turnover of critical leadership has been central to our inability to stay agile and decisive,"" said Plank.Linnartz was hired on a bet that her experience building out Marriott's renowned Bonvoy loyalty program and driving digital revenue for the hotel giant would offset her lack of experience in the retail industry. Before her departure, she managed to overhaul Under Armour's C-suite and build out its loyalty program. She was attempting to pivot the brand's assortment to a more athleisure-focused offering that had more stylish options for women, who tend to spend more on clothes and shoes than men do.Now Plank is looking to undo some of that work. He told analysts that the company had ""taken our eyes off"" its core men's apparel business, which has ""significantly impacted"" the brand's perception and led it to become ""more promotional and commoditized.""""We will rectify this,"" said Plank. ""This focus does not mean that we are deprioritizing our footwear or women's business per se but from a sequencing perspective, men's apparel will be our highest priority.""As Plank tries to reset the business, he said Under Armour plans to reduce its style counts by roughly 25% over the next 18 months and cut down the amount of time it takes to get a product from an idea to a showroom floor. He aims to streamline the process so it'll only take between 6 and12 months instead of the 18 months it currently takes — a system he called ""just plain uncompetitive in the 2024 landscape.""The full restructuring will focus on streamlining Under Armour's overall business, reducing silos and ensuring that every staffer's work is directly contributing to its primary goal: ""Selling more shirts and shoes.""""We are simply doing too much stuff. There are too many products, too many initiatives, too much of too much,"" said Plank. ""To reconstitute this brand, we must be highly focused and prioritize what needs to get done so that our teams know exactly what to do with a clear definition of success.""Read the full earnings release here.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"['In this articleUnder Armour announced a broad restructuring plan on Thursday as it said sales in its largest market, North America, plunged 10% and predicted the trend will get worse throughout its current fiscal year.', 'The athletic apparel retailer also saw profits sink by more than 96% during its fiscal fourth quarter, compared with the year-ago period.', ""It's unclear how many employees Under Armour will lay off as part of the restructuring, but the plan is expected to cost between $70 million and $90 million, a portion of which will be used for employee severance and benefits costs."", 'The company declined to share more information with CNBC about its restructuring.', ""The company's shares initially plunged double digits in pre-market trading after its earnings report was released, but later rebounded after its earnings call with Wall Street analysts."", 'Shares closed more than 1% lower.', ""Here's how the athletic apparel retailer did in its fiscal fourth quarter compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:The company's reported net income for the three-month period that ended March 31 was $6.6 million, or 2 cents per share, compared with $170.6 million, or 38 cents per share, a year earlier."", 'Excluding one-time items, the company reported earnings of 11 cents per share.', 'Sales dropped to $1.33 billion, down about 5% from $1.4 billion a year earlier.', 'During the quarter, sales in North America declined 10% to $772 million, worse than the $780 million that analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount.', 'Under Armour said it expects sales to continue to worsen in North America.', 'The company anticipates they will drop between 15% and 17% in its current fiscal year.', '""Due to a confluence of factors, including lower wholesale channel demand and inconsistent execution across our business, we are seizing this critical moment to make proactive decisions to build a premium positioning for our brand, which will pressure our top and bottom line in the near term,"" founder and CEO Kevin Plank said in a statement.', '""Over the next 18 months, there is a significant opportunity to reconstitute Under Armour\'s brand strength through achieving more, by doing less and focusing on our core fundamentals,"" he added.', 'Across Under Armour\'s business, the company is expecting revenue to be down ""at a low-double-digit percentage rate"" in its current fiscal year, while analysts had expected sales to grow by 2.1%, according to LSEG.The company is planning to cut down on promotions and discounting, which it expects will lead its gross margin to rise between 0.75 and 1 percentage point for the fiscal year.', ""It's expecting diluted earnings per share to be between 2 cents and 5 cents and adjusted diluted earnings per share to be between 18 cents and 21 cents for the year."", ""Analysts had expected earnings per share of 52 cents, according to LSEG.Under Armour's rough quarter comes about two months after the retailer announced former Marriott executive Stephanie Linnartz would be stepping down from her role as CEO after barely a year on the job and Plank would once again take the helm of the company he founded in 1996.Linnartz was the second CEO the company has cycled through in less than two years."", 'During a call with analysts, Plank was blunt about where things had gone wrong for Under Armour.', 'He pointed to inconsistent leadership as one of the primary issues.', '""With several CEOs and heads of products, marketing and North America over the past half decade, ongoing turnover of critical leadership has been central to our inability to stay agile and decisive,"" said Plank.', ""Linnartz was hired on a bet that her experience building out Marriott's renowned Bonvoy loyalty program and driving digital revenue for the hotel giant would offset her lack of experience in the retail industry."", ""Before her departure, she managed to overhaul Under Armour's C-suite and build out its loyalty program."", ""She was attempting to pivot the brand's assortment to a more athleisure-focused offering that had more stylish options for women, who tend to spend more on clothes and shoes than men do."", 'Now Plank is looking to undo some of that work.', 'He told analysts that the company had ""taken our eyes off"" its core men\'s apparel business, which has ""significantly impacted"" the brand\'s perception and led it to become ""more promotional and commoditized.', '""""We will rectify this,"" said Plank. ""', ""This focus does not mean that we are deprioritizing our footwear or women's business per se but from a sequencing perspective, men's apparel will be our highest priority."", '""As Plank tries to reset the business, he said Under Armour plans to reduce its style counts by roughly 25% over the next 18 months and cut down the amount of time it takes to get a product from an idea to a showroom floor.', 'He aims to streamline the process so it\'ll only take between 6 and12 months instead of the 18 months it currently takes — a system he called ""just plain uncompetitive in the 2024 landscape.', '""The full restructuring will focus on streamlining Under Armour\'s overall business, reducing silos and ensuring that every staffer\'s work is directly contributing to its primary goal: ""Selling more shirts and shoes.', '""""We are simply doing too much stuff.', 'There are too many products, too many initiatives, too much of too much,"" said Plank. ""', 'To reconstitute this brand, we must be highly focused and prioritize what needs to get done so that our teams know exactly what to do with a clear definition of success.', '""Read the full earnings release here.']",0.0605298505650281,"To reconstitute this brand, we must be highly focused and prioritize what needs to get done so that our teams know exactly what to do with a clear definition of success.","Across Under Armour's business, the company is expecting revenue to be down ""at a low-double-digit percentage rate"" in its current fiscal year, while analysts had expected sales to grow by 2.1%, according to LSEG.The company is planning to cut down on promotions and discounting, which it expects will lead its gross margin to rise between 0.75 and 1 percentage point for the fiscal year.",-0.484110727196648,"""Over the next 18 months, there is a significant opportunity to reconstitute Under Armour's brand strength through achieving more, by doing less and focusing on our core fundamentals,"" he added.","During the quarter, sales in North America declined 10% to $772 million, worse than the $780 million that analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount.",2024-05-19 Fat Brands confidentially files to IPO its Twin Peaks and Smokey Bones restaurant chains,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/14/fat-brands-twin-peaks-smokey-bones-confidentially-file-for-ipo.html,2024-05-14T17:28:16+0000,"In this articleFat Brands said Tuesday it has confidentially filed to take its Twin Peaks and Smokey Bones restaurant chains public through an initial public offering, less than a week after federal authorities charged the restaurant company and its chair Andy Wiederhorn for an alleged $47 million bogus loan scheme.Fat Brands announced its intention to spin off Twin Peaks through an IPO last year. At that time, the company had already disclosed a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission investigation into Wiederhorn.On Thursday, Fat Brands, Wiederhorn and a few other people were criminally indicted by a federal grand jury in Los Angeles for wire fraud, tax evasion and other counts related to the alleged scheme. In a separate civil complaint filed on Friday, the SEC accused the company and Wiederhorn of violations related to the same conduct.Both Fat Brands and Wiederhorn, through an attorney, have denied the charges.Since its founding in 2005, Twin Peaks has grown to nearly 115 restaurant locations in the U.S. and Mexico. Fat Brands bought the company in 2021. The sports bar chain is known for its female staff's revealing uniforms, similar to Hooters.Smokey Bones is a newer addition to Fat Brands' portfolio, which currently includes 18 chains. Olive Garden owner Darden Restaurants created the barbecue chain in 1999 but later sold the brand. Fat Brands acquired it in September 2023, with the goal of converting more than half its 61 corporate-owned restaurants into Twin Peaks locations.""Our priority is to use the proceeds from any transaction to deleverage the balance sheet,"" Wiederhorn said about the potential IPO on the company's first-quarter conference call on May 1.Wiederhorn owns 45% of Fat Brands' common shares through Fog Cutter Holdings, according to FactSet.Shares of the company have fallen 9% this year, dragging its market value down to about $90 million.",CNBC,14/05/2024,"['In this articleFat Brands said Tuesday it has confidentially filed to take its Twin Peaks and Smokey Bones restaurant chains public through an initial public offering, less than a week after federal authorities charged the restaurant company and its chair Andy Wiederhorn for an alleged $47 million bogus loan scheme.', 'Fat Brands announced its intention to spin off Twin Peaks through an IPO last year.', 'At that time, the company had already disclosed a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission investigation into Wiederhorn.', 'On Thursday, Fat Brands, Wiederhorn and a few other people werecriminally indictedby a federal grand jury in Los Angeles for wire fraud, tax evasion and other counts related to the alleged scheme.', 'In a separatecivil complaint filed on Friday, the SEC accused the company and Wiederhorn of violations related to the same conduct.', 'Both Fat Brands and Wiederhorn, through an attorney, have denied the charges.', 'Since its founding in 2005, Twin Peaks has grown to nearly 115 restaurant locations in the U.S. and Mexico.', 'Fat Brands bought the company in 2021.', ""The sports bar chain is known for its female staff's revealing uniforms, similar to Hooters."", ""Smokey Bones is a newer addition to Fat Brands' portfolio, which currently includes 18 chains."", 'Olive Garden owner Darden Restaurants created the barbecue chain in 1999 but later sold the brand.', 'Fat Brands acquired it in September 2023, with the goal of converting more than half its 61 corporate-owned restaurants into Twin Peaks locations.', '""Ourpriorityistousetheproceedsfromanytransactiontodeleveragethebalancesheet,"" Wiederhorn said about the potential IPO on the company\'s first-quarter conference call on May 1.Wiederhorn owns 45% of Fat Brands\' common shares through Fog Cutter Holdings, according to FactSet.', 'Shares of the company have fallen 9% this year, dragging its market value down to about $90 million.']",-0.0572883595827143,"At that time, the company had already disclosed a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission investigation into Wiederhorn.","In a separatecivil complaint filed on Friday, the SEC accused the company and Wiederhorn of violations related to the same conduct.",0.0004818141460418,"Since its founding in 2005, Twin Peaks has grown to nearly 115 restaurant locations in the U.S. and Mexico.","Shares of the company have fallen 9% this year, dragging its market value down to about $90 million.",2024-05-19 "Walmart surges to all-time high as earnings beat on high-income shopper, e-commerce gains",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/walmart-wmt-q1-2025-earnings-.html,2024-05-16T20:04:51+0000,"In this articleWalmart on Thursday topped quarterly earnings and revenue expectations, as the discounter made significant e-commerce gains, drove profits with newer businesses like advertising and won over more high-income shoppers.The big-box retailer said it now expects to hit the high end or slightly top its previous full-year guidance. Walmart had expected net sales growth of 3% to 4% and adjusted earnings per share of between $2.23 and $2.37.Shares of the company hit an all-time high Thursday and closed about 7% higher.In an interview with CNBC, Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey said one of the factors boosting Walmart's grocery business is the widening gap between the price of cooking at home and buying food at fast-food chains or restaurants.Plus, he added, shoppers appreciate the convenience that Walmart offers. For the first time, its delivery business surpassed its store pickup in terms of volume, Rainey said.""We've got customers that are coming to us more frequently than they have before and newer customers that we haven't traditionally had, and they're coming into a Walmart whether it's a virtual store online, or whether it's one of our physical stores,"" Rainey said.Here's what the discounter reported for the fiscal first quarter compared with what Wall Street expected, according to a survey of analysts by LSEG:Walmart's net income jumped to $5.10 billion, or 63 cents per share, in the three-month period that ended April 30, compared with $1.67 billion, or 21 cents per share, in the year-ago period.Revenue climbed 6% from $152.30 billion in the year-ago quarter. That increase includes a benefit of roughly 1% from an additional selling day in the period. As the nation's largest retailer and private employer, Walmart is often viewed as a bellwether for the U.S. economy. Yet it has generally fared better during an inflationary period than other retailers because it sells staples like groceries and has a value-oriented reputation.Same-store sales for Walmart U.S. climbed by 3.8%, excluding fuel. The industry metric includes sales from stores and clubs open for at least a year. At Sam's Club, same-store sales rose 4.4% year over year, excluding fuel.E-commerce sales shot up by 22% year over year for Walmart U.S., fueled by store pickup and delivery of online orders, as well as the company's growing third-party marketplace. Walmart's customers in the U.S. made more visits to its stores and website in the quarter, but spent roughly the same as in the year-ago period. Transactions rose 3.8% and average ticket was flat compared with the year-ago quarter.This week brought promising news for Walmart and other retailers: Inflation eased in April, according to the Labor Department data released Wednesday. The consumer price index was up 3.4% year over year. The closely watched number tracks how much goods and services cost at the cash register.Walmart saw some signs of easing, too. On the company's earnings call, CEO Doug McMillon said inflation in the U.S. was only up 0.4% for the quarter, with mid-single digit deflation on general merchandise and low-single digit inflation in food.He said the company has increased ""rollbacks,"" price reductions on specific items that it typically advertises on its website or with signs in its stores.Even so, the discounter has noticed the impact of inflation, as its shoppers have been selective with purchases. Rainey said customers' ""wallets are still stretched."" He said shoppers have bought less general merchandise, such as home goods and electronics, as they prioritize spending on food and health-related items, a trend that the company has seen for the past several quarters.Still, ""even the low-income consumer seems to be holding in there pretty well,"" Rainey said. He added that sales even in general merchandise categories improved year over year.Walmart had a weaker sales month in April, which mirrored retail sales numbers released by the Commerce Department on Wednesday, but that was offset by sales trends in the other months of the quarter. Rainey chalked up a weaker April to Easter shifting into March, along with cooler and rainier weather.He said sales have picked up again in May and looked similar to the average of the fiscal first quarter.On the earnings call, McMillon emphasized Walmart's expansion of its online business and success getting more customers to buy other items besides groceries. Groceries drive most of Walmart's business — accounting for nearly 60% of the company's U.S. sales in the most recent full fiscal year — but aren't as profitable as selling items like clothing or makeup.""We punched below our weight on general merchandise, specifically in apparel and home, for a really long time, maybe forever, and I think the progress we're seeing right now is driven by the in-store remodels and e-commerce,"" McMillon said.As Walmart tries to appeal to younger and more affluent households, it recently launched a new private-label grocery brand, which includes bolder flavors, plant-based items and more. It is also upgrading and modernizing more than 1,400 stores across the country. The renovated stores showcase some of the retailer's newer and more fashion-forward brands like Love & Sports, an activewear brand developed with fashion designer Michelle Smith and SoulCycle instructor Stacey Griffith, and a kitchen and home decor line called Beautiful, which was developed with Drew Barrymore.Walmart has looked beyond retail to drive profits higher and fend off rivals like Amazon.Those newer businesses like advertising and its subscription-based membership program, Walmart+, lifted its profit during the quarter and contributed to its operating income growth outpacing its sales growth. The company's global advertising business grew 24% during the quarter, including 26% growth for the segment in the U.S.The company's third-party marketplace has also been a significant driver of the business. Like Amazon, Walmart has expanded its online business by welcoming sellers onto its website, and then made more money by offering advertisement and fulfillment services to those sellers.In the U.S., marketplace sellers increased 36% in the quarter and the marketplace now carries more than 420 different items, McMillon said on an earnings call. In Mexico, the number of marketplace sellers grew by more than 50% with the total item count up nearly 80%.Rainey told CNBC that a third of Walmart's year-over-year operating income gains came from those newer businesses.Walmart has been slashing spending in some areas and investing heavily in others. Earlier this week, the company said it would lay off and relocate hundreds of its corporate employees, including the transfer of many to its headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas. That move came on the heels of the retailer shuttering its Walmart health clinics, a network of doctor and dentist offices that had opened next to its stores.On the other hand, the big-box retailer has poured money into other efforts. As it chases advertising dollars, Walmart announced in February that it will acquire smart TV maker Vizio in a $2.3 billion deal.Rainey said Walmart's announcement this week, which will relocate hundreds of people who currently work from their homes or in offices in Dallas, Toronto and Atlanta, is about shifting away from remote work, not about cost cuts. The move also included layoffs. Walmart has not announced a five-day-a-week office policy, but has said it wants employees to work from the office the majority of the time.""We just feel strongly in the benefit of working together,"" he said. ""One of our competitive advantages is our culture — and that's fostered by being together.""Shares of Walmart closed Thursday at $64, bringing the company's market cap to $515.83 billion. As of Thursday's close, the company's stock is up about 22% so far this year, surpassing the roughly 11% gains of the S&P 500 during the same period.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"['In this articleWalmart on Thursday topped quarterly earnings and revenue expectations, as the discounter made significant e-commerce gains, drove profits with newer businesses like advertising and won over more high-income shoppers.', 'The big-box retailer said it now expects to hit the high end or slightly top its previous full-year guidance.', 'Walmart had expected net sales growth of 3% to 4% and adjusted earnings per share of between $2.23 and $2.37.Shares of the company hit an all-time high Thursday and closed about 7% higher.', ""In an interview with CNBC, Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey said one of the factors boosting Walmart's grocery business is the widening gap between the price of cooking at home and buying food at fast-food chains or restaurants."", 'Plus, he added, shoppers appreciate the convenience that Walmart offers.', 'For the first time, its delivery business surpassed its store pickup in terms of volume, Rainey said.', '""We\'ve got customers that are coming to us more frequently than they have before and newer customers that we haven\'t traditionally had, and they\'re coming into a Walmart whether it\'s a virtual store online, or whether it\'s one of our physical stores,"" Rainey said.', ""Here's what the discounter reported for the fiscal first quarter compared with what Wall Street expected, according to a survey of analysts by LSEG:Walmart's net income jumped to $5.10 billion, or 63 cents per share, in the three-month period that ended April 30, compared with $1.67 billion, or 21 cents per share, in the year-ago period."", 'Revenue climbed 6% from $152.30 billion in the year-ago quarter.', 'That increase includes a benefit of roughly 1% from an additional selling day in the period.', ""As the nation's largest retailer and private employer, Walmart is often viewed as a bellwether for the U.S. economy."", 'Yet it has generally fared better during an inflationary period than other retailers because it sells staples like groceries and has a value-oriented reputation.', 'Same-store sales for Walmart U.S. climbed by 3.8%, excluding fuel.', 'The industry metric includes sales from stores and clubs open for at least a year.', ""At Sam's Club, same-store sales rose 4.4% year over year, excluding fuel."", ""E-commerce sales shot up by 22% year over year for Walmart U.S., fueled by store pickup and delivery of online orders, as well as the company's growing third-party marketplace."", ""Walmart's customers in the U.S. made more visits to its stores and website in the quarter, but spent roughly the same as in the year-ago period."", 'Transactions rose 3.8% and average ticket was flat compared with the year-ago quarter.', 'This week brought promising news for Walmart and other retailers: Inflation eased in April, according to the Labor Department data released Wednesday.', 'The consumer price index was up 3.4% year over year.', 'The closely watched number tracks how much goods and services cost at the cash register.', 'Walmart saw some signs of easing, too.', ""On the company's earnings call, CEO Doug McMillon said inflation in the U.S. was only up 0.4% for the quarter, with mid-single digit deflation on general merchandise and low-single digit inflation in food."", 'He said the company has increased ""rollbacks,"" price reductions on specific items that it typically advertises on its website or with signs in its stores.', 'Even so, the discounter has noticed the impact of inflation, as its shoppers have been selective with purchases.', 'Rainey said customers\' ""wallets are still stretched.""', 'He said shoppers have bought less general merchandise, such as home goods and electronics, as they prioritize spending on food and health-related items, a trend that the company has seen for the past several quarters.', 'Still, ""even the low-income consumer seems to be holding in there pretty well,"" Rainey said.', 'He added that sales even in general merchandise categories improved year over year.', 'Walmart had a weaker sales month in April, which mirrored retail sales numbers released by the Commerce Department on Wednesday, but that was offset by sales trends in the other months of the quarter.', 'Rainey chalked up a weaker April to Easter shifting into March, along with cooler and rainier weather.', 'He said sales have picked up again in May and looked similar to the average of the fiscal first quarter.', ""On the earnings call, McMillon emphasized Walmart's expansion of its online business and success getting more customers to buy other items besides groceries."", ""Groceries drive most of Walmart's business — accounting for nearly 60% of the company's U.S. sales in the most recent full fiscal year — but aren't as profitable as selling items like clothing or makeup."", '""We punched below our weight on general merchandise, specifically in apparel and home, for a really long time, maybe forever, and I think the progress we\'re seeing right now is driven by the in-store remodels and e-commerce,"" McMillon said.', 'As Walmart tries to appeal to younger and more affluent households, it recently launched a new private-label grocery brand, which includes bolder flavors, plant-based items and more.', 'It is also upgrading and modernizing more than 1,400 stores across the country.', ""The renovated stores showcase some of the retailer's newer and more fashion-forward brands like Love & Sports, an activewear brand developed with fashion designerMichelle Smith and SoulCycle instructor Stacey Griffith, and a kitchen and home decor line called Beautiful, which was developed with Drew Barrymore."", 'Walmart has looked beyond retail to drive profits higher and fend off rivals like Amazon.', 'Those newer businesses like advertising and its subscription-based membership program, Walmart+, lifted its profit during the quarter and contributed to its operating income growth outpacing its sales growth.', ""The company's global advertising business grew 24% during the quarter, including 26% growth for the segment in the U.S.The company's third-party marketplace has also been a significant driver of the business."", 'Like Amazon, Walmart has expanded its online business by welcoming sellers onto its website, and then made more money by offering advertisement and fulfillment services to those sellers.', 'In the U.S., marketplace sellers increased 36% in the quarter and the marketplace now carries more than 420 different items, McMillon said on an earnings call.', ""In Mexico, the number of marketplace sellers grew by more than 50% with the total item count up nearly 80%.Rainey told CNBC that a third of Walmart's year-over-year operating income gains came from those newer businesses."", 'Walmart has been slashing spending in some areas and investing heavily in others.', 'Earlier this week, the company said it would lay off and relocate hundreds of its corporate employees, including the transfer of many to its headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas.', 'That move came on the heels of the retailer shuttering its Walmart health clinics, a network of doctor and dentist offices that had opened next to its stores.', 'On the other hand, the big-box retailer has poured money into other efforts.', 'As it chases advertising dollars, Walmart announced in February that it will acquire smart TV maker Vizio in a $2.3 billion deal.', ""Rainey said Walmart's announcement this week, which will relocate hundreds of people who currently work from their homes or in offices in Dallas, Toronto and Atlanta, is about shifting away from remote work, not about cost cuts."", 'The move also included layoffs.', 'Walmart has not announced a five-day-a-week office policy, but has said it wants employees to work from the office the majority of the time.', '""We just feel strongly in the benefit of working together,"" he said. ""', ""One of our competitive advantages is our culture — and that's fostered by being together."", '""Shares of Walmart closed Thursday at $64, bringing the company\'s market cap to $515.83 billion.', ""As of Thursday's close, the company's stock is up about 22% so far this year, surpassing the roughly 11% gains of the S&P 500 during the same period.""]",0.2787178960899139,"In this articleWalmart on Thursday topped quarterly earnings and revenue expectations, as the discounter made significant e-commerce gains, drove profits with newer businesses like advertising and won over more high-income shoppers.","Rainey chalked up a weaker April to Easter shifting into March, along with cooler and rainier weather.",0.6785912852395665,The consumer price index was up 3.4% year over year.,"Walmart had a weaker sales month in April, which mirrored retail sales numbers released by the Commerce Department on Wednesday, but that was offset by sales trends in the other months of the quarter.",2024-05-19 Walgreens to offer its own cheaper version of opioid overdose reversal drug naloxone,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/15/walgreens-opioid-overdose-drug-naloxone.html,2024-05-15T15:37:47+0000,"In this articleWalgreens on Wednesday said it will offer its own cheaper version of the over-the-counter opioid overdose reversal spray naloxone. The drug is available online and will be in all stores at the end of the month. The drugstore retailer aims to boost the availability of the lifesaving medication in the U.S. as the nation grapples with the toll of the opioid epidemic and attempts to bring down alarmingly high drug fatality rates.More than 645,000 people died from overdoses involving any opioid, including prescription and illicit opioids, from 1999 to 2021, according to the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Naloxone can temporarily reverse the effects of an overdose from opioids, including heroin and fentanyl, when administered in time. The drug blocks the effects of opioids on the brain, restoring normal breathing and preventing death.Despite naloxone's efficacy, access to the treatment ""remains limited in many communities,"" according to a Walgreens release. The company said it will sell a two-dose pack of ""Walgreens Brand Naloxone"" for $34.99. That's around $10 cheaper than the over-the-counter branded drug Narcan, which became the first prescription-free version of naloxone to win Food and Drug Administration approval last year. Previously, patients needed a prescription to access naloxone.""That was a concerted decision to really do everything we can to increase accessibility, not just in terms of quantity and availability, but also in price,"" Dr. Priya Mammen, senior medical director in Walgreens' Office of Clinical Integrity, told CNBC in an interview. The company said the launch of its prescription-free naloxone nasal spray comes after the FDA's recent approval of the product. It is the generic equivalent of over-the-counter Narcan, which Walgreens currently offers in its stores.Mammen hopes Walgreens can help reduce the stigma associated with drug overdoses and naloxone use. The drug ""is not just for some people. It's a lifesaving medication that can intervene on anyone at any age, anytime, and it's something that families, individuals and communities can empower themselves by having it available and can be part of the solution,"" she said.",CNBC,15/05/2024,"['In this articleWalgreens on Wednesday said it will offer its own cheaper version of the over-the-counter opioid overdose reversal spray naloxone.', 'The drug is available online and will be in all stores at the end of the month.', 'The drugstore retailer aims to boost the availability of the lifesaving medication in the U.S. as the nation grapples with the toll of the opioid epidemic and attempts to bring down alarmingly high drug fatality rates.', 'More than 645,000 people died from overdoses involving any opioid, including prescription and illicit opioids, from 1999 to 2021, according to the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.', 'Naloxone can temporarily reverse the effects of an overdose from opioids, including heroin and fentanyl, when administered in time.', 'The drug blocks the effects of opioids on the brain, restoring normal breathing and preventing death.', 'Despite naloxone\'s efficacy, access to the treatment ""remains limited in many communities,"" according to a Walgreens release.', 'The company said it will sell a two-dose pack of ""Walgreens Brand Naloxone"" for $34.99.', ""That's around $10 cheaper than the over-the-counter branded drug Narcan, which became the first prescription-free version of naloxone to win Food and Drug Administration approval last year."", 'Previously, patients needed a prescription to access naloxone.', '""That was a concerted decision to really do everything we can to increase accessibility, not just in terms of quantity and availability, but also in price,"" Dr. Priya Mammen, senior medical director in Walgreens\' Office of Clinical Integrity, told CNBC in an interview.', ""The company said the launch of its prescription-free naloxone nasal spray comes after the FDA's recent approval of the product."", 'It is the generic equivalent of over-the-counter Narcan, which Walgreens currently offers in its stores.', 'Mammen hopes Walgreens can help reduce the stigma associated with drug overdoses and naloxone use.', 'The drug ""is not just for some people.', 'It\'s a lifesaving medication that can intervene on anyone at any age, anytime, and it\'s something that families, individuals and communities can empower themselves by having it available and can be part of the solution,"" she said.']",0.039908463065855,"That's around $10 cheaper than the over-the-counter branded drug Narcan, which became the first prescription-free version of naloxone to win Food and Drug Administration approval last year.",The drugstore retailer aims to boost the availability of the lifesaving medication in the U.S. as the nation grapples with the toll of the opioid epidemic and attempts to bring down alarmingly high drug fatality rates.,0.6555501619974772,The drugstore retailer aims to boost the availability of the lifesaving medication in the U.S. as the nation grapples with the toll of the opioid epidemic and attempts to bring down alarmingly high drug fatality rates.,"Despite naloxone's efficacy, access to the treatment ""remains limited in many communities,"" according to a Walgreens release.",2024-05-19 "Boeing may be prosecuted after breaking safety agreement that prevented criminal charges for 737 crashes, US DOJ says",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/14/business/boeing-justice-department-criminal-prosecution/index.html," Updated 7:40 AM EDT, Wed May 15, 2024 ","The US Justice Department on Tuesday notified Boeing that it breached terms of its 2021 agreement in which the company avoided criminal charges for two fatal 737 Max crashes. After a series of safety missteps earlier this year, including a door plug that blew off an Alaska Airlines flight shortly after takeoff in January, the Department of Justice said Boeing is now subject to criminal prosecution. “For failing to fulfill completely the terms of and obligations under the [deferred prosecution agreement], Boeing is subject to prosecution by the United States for any federal criminal violation of which the United States has knowledge,” the Justice Department said in a letter to US District Judge Reed O’Connor in Fort Worth, Texas, who oversaw the prior agreement. The Biden administration said in its letter that it has not yet determined how it will proceed, however, and Boeing will have an opportunity to respond to its breach of the agreement – and steps it has taken to remediate the situation – by June 13. It will let the court know by July 7 how it will proceed with the case. Boeing, in a statement, said it has upheld its end of the bargain. “We believe that we have honored the terms of that agreement, and look forward to the opportunity to respond to the Department on this issue,” the company said in a statement. “As we do so, we will engage with the Department with the utmost transparency, as we have throughout the entire term of the agreement.” The notification comes as the Justice Department conducts a new investigation into Boeing’s operations in the wake the door plug incident. The earlier deal had resolved a fraud investigation related to the company’s development of its 737 Max aircraft. Under its deferred prosecution agreement from January 2021, Boeing paid $2.5 billion in penalties and promised to improve its safety and compliance protocols. Families of victims of the October 2018 Lion Air 737 Max crash and the March 2019 Ethiopian Airlines 737 Max crash had long denounced the delayed prosecution agreement, arguing it denied them justice for the deaths of their loved ones. Families of victims and lawyers representing them met with the Justice Department late last month to persuade the Biden administration to end the agreement in light of multiple safety lapses at Boeing this year and in past years after the 2021 agreement was reached. Following the April 2024 meeting, attorney Paul Cassell, who represents the victims’ families, said at a press conference that the deferred prosecution agreement was “rigged” and brokered without families’ say. Cassell pledged to hold Boeing accountable for its “fraud and misconduct.” On Tuesday, Cassell said, “This is a positive first step, and for the families, a long time coming. But we need to see further action from DOJ to hold Boeing accountable, and plan to use our meeting on May 31 to explain in more detail what we believe would be a satisfactory remedy to Boeing’s ongoing criminal conduct.” The Justice Department in its letter said it notified the families that Boeing breached its agreement, and it will continue to confer with families of the crash victims as well as other airline customers about next steps. The Department of Justice plans to meet with the families next on May 31. In Thursday’s letter to the federal judge overseeing the prior agreement, the Justice Department said it had notified the company that “the government has determined that Boeing breached its obligations” in multiple parts of the 2021 deal “by failing to design, implement, and enforce a compliance and ethics program to prevent and detect violations of the U.S. fraud laws throughout its operations.” Despite pledging to clean up its act, Boeing had a seemingly endless run of quality and safety lapses in the years since its deferred prosecution agreement. On September 20, 2021, just months after its agreement, Boeing disclosed it found empty tequila bottles inside one of the two 747 jets being refurbished for use as the next generation of Air Force One. In April 2023, Boeing announced its supplier used a “non-standard manufacturing process,” delaying deliveries of the 737 Max. In February 2024, a month after the door plug incident, a preliminary National Transportation Safety Board investigation found that the plane left a Boeing factory missing the four bolts needed to secure the door plug. Later that month, the Federal Aviation Administration issued a report sharply critical of the culture at Boeing, citing “gaps in Boeing’s safety journey,” and gave Boeing 90 days to come up with a plan to fix its problems. Subsequent FAA reports found multiple problems with Boeing’s production practices following a six-week audit. In March, the FAA identified more potential safety issues with the engines of the 737 Max and 787 Dreamliner. Last month, the FAA announced an investigation into a whistleblower’s complaint that the company took shortcuts when manufacturing its 777 and 787 Dreamliner jets and that those risks could become catastrophic as the airplanes age. The company disputed the complaint. This story has been updated with additional developments and context.",CNN,15/05/2024,"['The US Justice Department on Tuesday notified Boeing that it breached terms ofits2021 agreement in which the company avoided criminal charges for two fatal 737 Max crashes.', 'After a series of safety missteps earlier this year, including a door plug that blew off an Alaska Airlines flight shortly after takeoff in January, the Department of Justice said Boeing is now subject to criminal prosecution.', '“For failing to fulfill completely the terms of and obligations under the [deferred prosecution agreement], Boeing is subject to prosecution by the United States for any federal criminal violation of which the United States has knowledge,” the Justice Department said in a letter to US District Judge Reed O’Connor in Fort Worth, Texas, who oversaw the prior agreement.', 'The Biden administration said in its letter that it has not yet determined how it will proceed, however, and Boeing will have an opportunity to respond to its breach of the agreement – and steps it has taken to remediate the situation – by June 13.', 'It will let the court know by July 7 how it will proceed with the case.', 'Boeing, in a statement, said it has upheld its end of the bargain.', '“We believe that we have honored the terms of that agreement, and look forward to the opportunity to respond to the Department on this issue,” the company said in a statement. “', 'As we do so, we will engage with the Department with the utmost transparency, as we have throughout the entire term of the agreement.”', 'The notification comes as the Justice Department conducts a new investigation into Boeing’s operations in the wake the door plug incident.', 'The earlier deal had resolved a fraud investigation related to the company’s development of its 737 Max aircraft.', 'Under its deferred prosecution agreement from January 2021, Boeing paid $2.5 billion in penalties and promised to improve its safety and compliance protocols.', 'Families of victims of the October 2018 Lion Air 737 Max crash and the March 2019 Ethiopian Airlines 737 Max crash had long denounced the delayed prosecution agreement, arguing it denied them justice for the deaths of their loved ones.', 'Families of victims and lawyers representing them met with the Justice Department late last month to persuade the Biden administration to end the agreement in light of multiple safety lapses at Boeing this year and in past years after the 2021 agreement was reached.', 'Following the April 2024 meeting, attorney Paul Cassell, who represents the victims’ families, said at a press conference that the deferred prosecution agreement was “rigged” and brokered without families’ say.', 'Cassell pledged to hold Boeing accountable for its “fraud and misconduct.”', 'On Tuesday, Cassell said, “This is a positive first step, and for the families, a long time coming.', 'But we need to see further action from DOJ to hold Boeing accountable, and plan to use our meeting on May 31 to explain in more detail what we believe would be a satisfactory remedy to Boeing’s ongoing criminal conduct.”', 'The Justice Department in its letter said it notified the families that Boeing breached its agreement, and it will continue to confer with families of the crash victims as well as other airline customers about next steps.', 'The Department of Justice plans to meet with the families next on May 31.', 'In Thursday’s letter to the federal judge overseeing the prior agreement, the Justice Department said it had notified the company that “the government has determined that Boeing breached its obligations” in multiple parts of the 2021 deal “by failing to design, implement, and enforce a compliance and ethics program to prevent and detect violations of the U.S. fraud laws throughout its operations.”', 'Despite pledging to clean up its act, Boeing had a seemingly endless run of quality and safety lapses in the years since its deferred prosecution agreement.', 'On September 20, 2021, just months after its agreement, Boeing disclosed it foundempty tequila bottlesinside one of the two 747 jets being refurbished for use as the next generation of Air Force One.', 'In April 2023, Boeing announced its supplier used a “non-standard manufacturing process,” delaying deliveries of the 737 Max.', 'In February 2024, a month after the door plug incident, a preliminary National Transportation Safety Board investigation found that the plane left a Boeing factory missing the four bolts needed to secure the door plug.', 'Later that month, the Federal Aviation Administration issued a report sharplycritical of the cultureat Boeing, citing “gaps in Boeing’s safety journey,” and gave Boeing 90 daysto come up with a plan to fix its problems.', 'Subsequent FAA reports found multiple problemswith Boeing’s production practices following a six-week audit.', 'In March, the FAA identified morepotential safety issueswith the engines of the 737 Max and 787 Dreamliner.', 'Last month, the FAA announced an investigation intoa whistleblower’s complaintthat the company took shortcuts when manufacturing its 777 and 787 Dreamliner jets and that those risks could become catastrophic as the airplanes age.', 'The company disputed the complaint.', 'This story has been updated with additional developments and context.']",0.1089912220063482,Families of victims and lawyers representing them met with the Justice Department late last month to persuade the Biden administration to end the agreement in light of multiple safety lapses at Boeing this year and in past years after the 2021 agreement was reached.,"Families of victims of the October 2018 Lion Air 737 Max crash and the March 2019 Ethiopian Airlines 737 Max crash had long denounced the delayed prosecution agreement, arguing it denied them justice for the deaths of their loved ones.",-0.2991391751501295,"On Tuesday, Cassell said, “This is a positive first step, and for the families, a long time coming.","Despite pledging to clean up its act, Boeing had a seemingly endless run of quality and safety lapses in the years since its deferred prosecution agreement.",2024-05-19 "Walmart is laying off, relocating hundreds of corporate workers across the country. Read the memo",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/14/walmart-to-lay-off-relocate-hundreds-of-corporate-workers.html,2024-05-14T18:56:07+0000,"In this articleWalmart is laying off hundreds of corporate workers across the country as it relocates many employees to its Arkansas headquarters.The big-box retailer confirmed the layoffs and relocations in a memo sent to employees Tuesday.In the memo, Chief People Officer Donna Morris said the move is meant to bring more of its employees back to the office after the Covid-19 pandemic. The company brought corporate employees back to its Bentonville, Arkansas, headquarters in February 2022.Now, she said, Walmart is taking that a step further. The majority of employees working remotely and in offices in Dallas, Atlanta and Toronto have been asked to relocate. Most will be moved to the company's Arkansas headquarters, but some will also relocate to offices in the San Francisco Bay Area or Hoboken, New Jersey, she said.""In addition, some parts of our business have made changes that will result in a reduction of several hundred campus roles,"" she said in the memo. ""While the overall numbers are small in percentage, we are focused on supporting each of our associates affected by these changes.""Walmart did not say how many people were affected by the cuts.The news comes days before Walmart's much-anticipated earnings report on Thursday.The layoffs are the latest cost cut for the discounter. In late April, Walmart announced it would shutter 51 health clinics across Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois and Texas. The new clinics, which offered doctor, dentist and therapy appointments, were part of Walmart Health, a broad effort by the discounter to bring lower prices to the health-care industry. It had opened the health clinics next to its big-box stores, but said in an announcement on its website that the business was not financially sustainable.Walmart is the nation's largest private employer with about 1.6 million employees, most of whom work at its stores across the country.Walmart has another reason to bring more employees to Bentonville: It is building a nearly 350-acre campus there. The major development, which is well underway, includes 12 office buildings, along with parking lots, a hotel and other amenities. The campus' first few buildings have already opened, including a fitness center and a day care.The Wall Street Journal first reported the layoffs and relocations.Read the full memo from Morris to Walmart employees:It has been a little over four years since we faced the global pandemic that reshaped our lives in many ways, including our ways of working. In February 2022, we made the decision to bring Home Office associates back into our campus offices. We believe that being together, in person, makes us better and helps us to collaborate, innovate and move even faster. We also believe it helps strengthen our culture as well as grow and develop our associates.With the goal of bringing more of us together more often, we are asking the majority of associates working remotely, and the majority of associates within our offices in Dallas, Atlanta, and our Toronto Global Tech office, to relocate. Most relocations will be to our Home Office in Bentonville, but some will be to our offices in the San Francisco Bay Area or Hoboken/New York.In addition, some parts of our business have made changes that will result in a reduction of several hundred campus roles. While the overall numbers are small in percentage, we are focused on supporting each of our associates affected by these changes.We have had discussions with associates who were directly impacted by these decisions. We will work closely with them in the coming days and months to navigate the best path forward.This is developing story. Please check back for updates.",CNBC,14/05/2024,"['In this articleWalmart is laying off hundreds of corporate workers across the country as it relocates many employees to its Arkansas headquarters.', 'The big-box retailer confirmed the layoffs and relocations in a memo sent to employees Tuesday.', 'In the memo, Chief People Officer Donna Morris said the move is meant to bring more of its employees back to the office after the Covid-19 pandemic.', 'The company brought corporate employees back to its Bentonville, Arkansas, headquarters in February 2022.Now, she said, Walmart is taking that a step further.', 'The majority of employees working remotely and in offices in Dallas, Atlanta and Toronto have been asked to relocate.', ""Most will be moved to the company's Arkansas headquarters, but some will also relocate to offices in the San Francisco Bay Area or Hoboken, New Jersey, she said."", '""In addition, some parts of our business have made changes that will result in a reduction of several hundred campus roles,"" she said in the memo. ""', 'While the overall numbers are small in percentage, we are focused on supporting each of our associates affected by these changes.', '""Walmart did not say how many people were affected by the cuts.', ""The news comes days before Walmart's much-anticipated earnings report on Thursday."", 'The layoffs are the latest cost cut for the discounter.', 'In late April, Walmart announced it would shutter 51 health clinics across Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois and Texas.', 'The new clinics, which offered doctor, dentist and therapy appointments, were part of Walmart Health, a broad effort by the discounter to bring lower prices to the health-care industry.', 'It had opened the health clinics next to its big-box stores, but said in an announcement on its website that the business was not financially sustainable.', ""Walmart is the nation's largest private employer with about 1.6 million employees, most of whom work at its stores across the country."", 'Walmart has another reason to bring more employees to Bentonville: It is building a nearly 350-acre campus there.', 'The major development, which is well underway, includes 12 office buildings, along with parking lots, a hotel and other amenities.', ""The campus' first few buildings have already opened, including a fitness center and a day care."", 'The Wall Street Journal first reported the layoffs and relocations.', 'Read the full memo from Morris to Walmart employees:It has been a little over four years since we faced the global pandemic that reshaped our lives in many ways, including our ways of working.', 'In February 2022, we made the decision to bring Home Office associates back into our campus offices.', 'We believe that being together, in person, makes us better and helps us to collaborate, innovate and move even faster.', 'We also believe it helps strengthen our culture as well as grow and develop our associates.', 'With the goal of bringing more of us together more often, we are asking the majority of associates working remotely, and the majority of associates within our offices in Dallas, Atlanta, and our Toronto Global Tech office, to relocate.', 'Most relocations will be to our Home Office in Bentonville, but some will be to our offices in the San Francisco Bay Area or Hoboken/New York.', 'In addition, some parts of our business have made changes that will result in a reduction of several hundred campus roles.', 'While the overall numbers are small in percentage, we are focused on supporting each of our associates affected by these changes.', 'We have had discussions with associates who were directly impacted by these decisions.', 'We will work closely with them in the coming days and months to navigate the best path forward.', 'This is developing story.', 'Please check back for updates.']",0.1192392778391382,"We believe that being together, in person, makes us better and helps us to collaborate, innovate and move even faster.","""Walmart did not say how many people were affected by the cuts.",0.2507317140698433,We also believe it helps strengthen our culture as well as grow and develop our associates.,"It had opened the health clinics next to its big-box stores, but said in an announcement on its website that the business was not financially sustainable.",2024-05-19 Disney+ will stream Caitlin Clark's WNBA debut in the platform's first live sports event,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/14/disney-to-stream-caitlin-clarks-wnba-debut-with-indiana-fever.html,2024-05-15T12:13:02+0000,"In this articleThe Women's National Basketball Association regular season opens Tuesday night with breakout star Caitlin Clark making her debut as point guard for the Indiana Fever. The game will be streamed on Disney+, the service's first live sports event.As the NCAA's all-time leading scorer for both men's and women's basketball, Clark helped draw a record 18.9 million viewers to the Women's March Madness National Championship game last month. The former Iowa star was drafted as the No. 1 pick on April 15, which alone led 2.45 million viewers to tune in, surpassing the league's previous high for a draft by 307%.Following Clark's debut at 7:30 p.m. ET against the Connecticut Sun, Disney+ will stream the Phoenix Mercury vs. Las Vegas Aces matchup. Disney+ has previously streamed animated simulcasts of sporting events using cartoon characters in place of the athletes, but Tuesday's doubleheader is the first instance of a live sports game streamed on the platform.Disney nearly turned a profit in its streaming unit for the first time during its fiscal second quarter, the company reported last week. The entertainment giant has been increasingly leaning on sports streaming to drive viewership.Disney's ESPN is planning to launch a full direct-to-consumer streaming product in fall 2025 that will allow consumers to subscribe to ESPN without cable.It is also partnering with Warner Bros. Discovery and Fox Corp. to offer a sports streaming service that they expect to launch this fall, the companies announced in February.Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery's exclusive TV rights for NBA games is currently under negotiation.The WNBA's existing media rights deal expires in 2025. The deal is reported to be worth roughly $60 million, and WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert said she expects that to double when the rights are renegotiated.Patrick Rishe, director of the Sports Business Program at Washington University's Olin Business School, said the WNBA debut on Tuesday could be a ""watershed moment for the league,"" and the choice to have the game on Disney+ will be critical for the league's ""key demographic"" of families and younger people.""They covet younger fans, and this is how younger fans view their sports these days — it is through streaming,"" Rishe told CNBC's ""Worldwide Exchange"" on Tuesday.""I certainly see some parallels between the potential of Caitlin Clark and her power in terms of increasing the reach of the WNBA and Lionel Messi, of all people, and what is going on with Apple TV,"" Rishe added, in reference to the soccer superstar's 10-year deal with Major League Soccer, and the league's streaming deal with Apple TV.",CNBC,15/05/2024,"[""In this articleThe Women's National Basketball Association regular season opens Tuesday night with breakout star Caitlin Clark making her debut as point guard for the Indiana Fever."", ""The game will be streamed on Disney+, the service's first live sports event."", ""As the NCAA's all-time leading scorer for both men's and women's basketball, Clark helped draw a record 18.9 million viewers to the Women's March Madness National Championship game last month."", 'The former Iowa star was drafted as the No.', ""1 pick on April 15, which alone led 2.45 million viewers to tune in, surpassing the league's previous high for a draft by 307%.Following Clark's debut at 7:30 p.m. ET against the Connecticut Sun, Disney+ will stream the Phoenix Mercury vs. Las Vegas Aces matchup."", ""Disney+ has previously streamed animated simulcasts of sporting events using cartoon characters in place of the athletes, but Tuesday's doubleheader is the first instance of a live sports game streamed on the platform."", 'Disney nearly turned a profit in its streaming unit for the first time during its fiscal second quarter, the company reported last week.', 'The entertainment giant has been increasingly leaning on sports streaming to drive viewership.', ""Disney's ESPN is planning to launch a full direct-to-consumer streaming product in fall 2025 that will allow consumers to subscribe to ESPN without cable."", 'It is also partnering with Warner Bros. Discovery and Fox Corp. to offer a sports streaming service that they expect to launch this fall, the companies announced in February.', ""Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery's exclusive TV rights for NBA games is currently under negotiation."", ""The WNBA's existing media rights deal expires in 2025."", 'The deal is reported to be worth roughly $60 million, and WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert said she expects that to double when the rights are renegotiated.', 'Patrick Rishe, director of the Sports Business Program at Washington University\'s Olin Business School, said the WNBA debut on Tuesday could be a ""watershed moment for the league,"" and the choice to have the game on Disney+ will be critical for the league\'s ""key demographic"" of families and younger people.', '""They covet younger fans, and this is how younger fans view their sports these days — it is through streaming,"" Rishe told CNBC\'s ""Worldwide Exchange"" on Tuesday.', '""I certainly see some parallels between the potential of Caitlin Clark and her power in terms of increasing the reach of the WNBA and Lionel Messi, of all people, and what is going on with Apple TV,"" Rishe added, in reference to the soccer superstar\'s 10-year deal with Major League Soccer, and the league\'s streaming deal with Apple TV.']",0.0587261477209856,"Disney nearly turned a profit in its streaming unit for the first time during its fiscal second quarter, the company reported last week.","Patrick Rishe, director of the Sports Business Program at Washington University's Olin Business School, said the WNBA debut on Tuesday could be a ""watershed moment for the league,"" and the choice to have the game on Disney+ will be critical for the league's ""key demographic"" of families and younger people.",0.96605886220932,"Disney nearly turned a profit in its streaming unit for the first time during its fiscal second quarter, the company reported last week.",,2024-05-19 "Home Depot misses on revenue, as high interest rates hurt sales",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/14/home-depot-hd-q1-2024-earnings-.html,2024-05-14T20:51:04+0000,"In this articleHome Depot on Tuesday posted quarterly revenue below Wall Street's expectations, as shoppers postponed bigger discretionary projects like bath and kitchen remodels because of higher interest rates and made spring purchases late.Still, the home improvement retailer reaffirmed its full-year guidance, which includes an additional week from the prior year. It said it expects total sales to grow about 1% in fiscal 2024, including those extra days. However, the retailer said it anticipates comparable sales, which take out the impact of store openings and closures, to decline about 1%, excluding that additional week.In an interview with CNBC, Chief Financial Officer Richard McPhail said customers are in a waiting game that began in the second half of last year, as they responded to mortgage rates climbing. He said the company anticipated those trends would continue.""The home improvement customer is extremely healthy from a financial perspective,"" he said. ""And so it's not the case of not having the ability to spend. What they tell us is they're just simply deferring these projects as given higher rates, it just doesn't seem the right moment to execute.""Here's what the company reported for the three-month period that ended April 28 compared with what Wall Street expected, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:Net income for the fiscal first quarter decreased to $3.6 billion, or $3.63 per share, from $3.87 billion, or $3.82 per share, in the year-ago period. Net sales fell 2.3% from $37.26 billion.Comparable sales dropped 2.8% in the fiscal first quarter across the business and declined 3.2% in the U.S.Home Depot is contending with a tougher housing backdrop, which has dampened demand for do-it-yourself projects. About half of Home Depot's sales come from DIY customers, and the other half come from pros like roofers and landscapers.As interest rates remain high, consumers have been reluctant to move out of their homes and into new ones — the kind of turnover that often inspires home projects. Higher interest rates have also dinged the desire for larger-scale projects that can require financing. For the past several quarters, Home Depot has seen customers buy fewer big-ticket items and take on more modest projects – a trend that persisted in the most recent quarter.In the fiscal first quarter, customers made fewer visits to Home Depot's stores and website and tended to spend less when they did. Customer transactions declined 1% to 386.8 million and average ticket fell 1.3% to $90.68.Home Depot has seen sales moderate after more than two years of explosive demand during the Covid pandemic. The company posted its worst revenue miss in nearly two decades and cut its forecast in the year-ago first quarter. Home Depot's sales totaled $152.7 billion in the fiscal year that ended in late January, a drop of 3% from the previous year.Inflation may also be playing a role in that pullback, as consumers spend more money on essentials and have to make trade-offs when spending discretionary income.However, McPhail said Home Depot is not seeing customers trade down to cheaper items, like less expensive power tools or appliances. He pinned the company's softer sales in large part on consumers' ""deferral mindset"" and a housing market that has slowed dramatically.""When we have seen mortgage rates decrease slightly, as we saw at the beginning of this quarter, the housing turnover seems to respond quickly and sharply in a positive direction,"" he said. ""And so we think that's an indicator that there is a tremendous amount of pent-up demand for household formation and housing turnover and the larger projects that are associated with housing turnover.""Weather pressured sales, too, in the recent quarter, he said. Spring is the biggest sales season for home improvement retailers, including Home Depot. Yet customers delayed outdoor purchases because of colder and wetter weather in many parts of the country, he said.Those spring purchases have begun to pick up as the weather improves, he said.To overcome slower sales, the home improvement retailer has revved up its strategy to attract pros, since they tend to buy larger quantities and offer a steadier source of sales. Home Depot has a growing network of distribution centers across the country that can store and deliver roofing shingles, insulation and other supplies straight to job sites. It announced in late March that it would acquire SRS Distribution, a Texas-based specialty distributor of roofing, landscaping and pool supplies, for $18.25 billion in the largest acquisition in the company's history.McPhail said the deal is still on track to close this fiscal year, which ends in early February.Along with wooing pros, Home Depot is trying to drive growth by opening about a dozen new stores this fiscal year and adding features to improve its online and in-store experience.McPhail said some business dynamics have improved, even as sales have gotten softer. He said Home Depot stores are fully staffed and have the best in-stock levels they have had in years. Transportation costs have fallen. While organized retail crime remains a challenge for the industry, he said shrink, a term that refers to items lost, stolen or damaged, declined at Home Depot year over year, too.Home Depot has also added technology to make sure it has items on shelves when customers need them. For example, it is using computer vision to make sure that products for sale are damage-free and to prevent theft when customers use self-checkout, said Ann-Marie Campbell, senior executive vice president who oversees U.S. stores and operations, on the company's earnings call.Shares of Home Depot closed Monday at $340.96. So far this year, Home Depot's shares have fallen about 2% compared with the roughly 9% gains of the S&P 500.",CNBC,14/05/2024,"[""In this articleHome Depot on Tuesday posted quarterly revenue below Wall Street's expectations, as shoppers postponed bigger discretionary projects like bath and kitchen remodels because of higher interest rates and made spring purchases late."", 'Still, the home improvement retailer reaffirmed its full-year guidance, which includes an additional week from the prior year.', 'It said it expects total sales to grow about 1% in fiscal 2024, including those extra days.', 'However, the retailer said it anticipates comparable sales, which take out the impact of store openings and closures, to decline about 1%, excluding that additional week.', 'In an interview with CNBC, Chief Financial Officer Richard McPhail said customers are in a waiting game that began in the second half of last year, as they responded to mortgage rates climbing.', 'He said the company anticipated those trends would continue.', '""The home improvement customer is extremely healthy from a financial perspective,"" he said. ""', ""And so it's not the case of not having the ability to spend."", ""What they tell us is they're just simply deferring these projects as given higher rates, it just doesn't seem the right moment to execute."", '""Here\'s what the company reported for the three-month period that ended April 28 compared with what Wall Street expected, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:Net income for the fiscal first quarter decreased to $3.6 billion, or $3.63 per share, from $3.87 billion, or $3.82 per share, in the year-ago period.', 'Net sales fell 2.3% from $37.26 billion.', 'Comparable sales dropped 2.8% in the fiscal first quarter across the business and declined 3.2% in the U.S.Home Depot is contending with a tougher housing backdrop, which has dampened demand for do-it-yourself projects.', ""About half of Home Depot's sales come from DIY customers, and the other half come from pros like roofers and landscapers."", 'As interest rates remain high, consumers have been reluctant to move out of their homes and into new ones — the kind of turnover that often inspires home projects.', 'Higher interest rates have also dinged the desire for larger-scale projects that can require financing.', 'For the past several quarters, Home Depot has seen customers buy fewer big-ticket items and take on more modest projects – a trend that persisted in the most recent quarter.', ""In the fiscal first quarter, customers made fewer visits to Home Depot's stores and website and tended to spend less when they did."", 'Customer transactions declined 1% to 386.8 million and average ticket fell 1.3% to $90.68.Home Depot has seen sales moderate after more than two years of explosive demand during the Covid pandemic.', 'The company posted its worst revenue miss in nearly two decades and cut its forecast in the year-ago first quarter.', ""Home Depot's sales totaled $152.7 billion in the fiscal year that ended in late January, a drop of 3% from the previous year."", 'Inflation may also be playing a role in that pullback, as consumers spend more money on essentials and have to make trade-offs when spending discretionary income.', 'However, McPhail said Home Depot is not seeing customers trade down to cheaper items, like less expensive power tools or appliances.', 'He pinned the company\'s softer sales in large part on consumers\' ""deferral mindset"" and a housing market that has slowed dramatically.', '""When we have seen mortgage rates decrease slightly, as we saw at the beginning of this quarter, the housing turnover seems to respond quickly and sharply in a positive direction,"" he said. ""', ""And so we think that's an indicator that there is a tremendous amount of pent-up demand for household formation and housing turnover and the larger projects that are associated with housing turnover."", '""Weather pressured sales, too, in the recent quarter, he said.', 'Spring is the biggest sales season for home improvement retailers, including Home Depot.', 'Yet customers delayed outdoor purchases because of colder and wetter weather in many parts of the country, he said.', 'Those spring purchases have begun to pick up as the weather improves, he said.', 'To overcome slower sales, the home improvement retailer has revved up its strategy to attract pros, since they tend to buy larger quantities and offer a steadier source of sales.', 'Home Depot has a growing network of distribution centers across the country that can store and deliver roofing shingles, insulation and other supplies straight to job sites.', ""It announced in late March that it would acquire SRS Distribution, a Texas-based specialty distributor of roofing, landscaping and pool supplies, for $18.25 billion in the largest acquisition in the company's history."", 'McPhail said the deal is still on track to close this fiscal year, which ends in early February.', 'Along with wooing pros, Home Depot is trying to drive growth by opening about a dozen new stores this fiscal year and adding features to improve its online and in-store experience.', 'McPhail said some business dynamics have improved, even as sales have gotten softer.', 'He said Home Depot stores are fully staffed and have the best in-stock levels they have had in years.', 'Transportation costs have fallen.', 'While organized retail crime remains a challenge for the industry, he said shrink, a term that refers to items lost, stolen or damaged, declined at Home Depot year over year, too.', 'Home Depot has also added technology to make sure it has items on shelves when customers need them.', ""For example, it is using computer vision to make sure that products for sale are damage-free and to prevent theft when customers use self-checkout, said Ann-Marie Campbell, senior executive vice president who oversees U.S. stores and operations, on the company's earnings call."", 'Shares of Home Depot closed Monday at $340.96.', ""So far this year, Home Depot's shares have fallen about 2% compared with the roughly 9% gains of the S&P 500.""]",0.1710089358690847,"As interest rates remain high, consumers have been reluctant to move out of their homes and into new ones — the kind of turnover that often inspires home projects.","While organized retail crime remains a challenge for the industry, he said shrink, a term that refers to items lost, stolen or damaged, declined at Home Depot year over year, too.",-0.1085971516947592,"It said it expects total sales to grow about 1% in fiscal 2024, including those extra days.",The company posted its worst revenue miss in nearly two decades and cut its forecast in the year-ago first quarter.,2024-05-19 "People on Novo Nordisk's Wegovy maintain weight loss for up to four years, study says",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/14/wegovy-patients-maintain-weight-loss-for-4-years-novo-nordisk-study.html,2024-05-14T15:16:13+0000,"In this articlePatients taking Novo Nordisk's obesity drug Wegovy maintained an average of 10% weight loss for up to four years, according to a new analysis published Tuesday from the longest clinical trial to date on the treatment.The highly popular drug also reduced the risk of heart disease regardless of a patient's weight, a second analysis on the same trial found. Both analyses were presented at the European Congress on Obesity in Venice, Italy, this week.The findings shed light on the long-term effects of Wegovy and add to growing evidence of the weekly injection's broad health benefits. That could boost Novo Nordisk's case for insurers and governments to cover the costly but effective drug.Insurance coverage is limited for Wegovy, part of a class of medications called GLP-1s. Those obesity and diabetes treatments have soared in popularity over the last year and work by mimicking a hormone produced in the gut to suppress a person's appetite. Neither Novo Nordisk or Eli Lilly, which has its own weight loss drug, have been able to produce enough supply to meet the insatiable demand for their treatments.The two analyses build on data published in November from Novo Nordisk's SELECT trial. The findings from that trial showed that Wegovy slashed the risk of heart attacks, stroke and other serious cardiovascular complications by 20% in people who have obesity or are overweight and also have cardiovascular disease.The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Wegovy for that purpose in March.The SELECT trial, which included more than 17,000 patients from over 40 countries, tested Wegovy for its cardiovascular benefits.Participants were not required to track diet and exercise because it was not an obesity study. Patients in the trial lost around 10% of their total body weight on average after 65 weeks on Wegovy, according to the first analysis published in the journal Nature.Patients continued to take the weekly drug over a period of three years and four months and sustained their weight loss for up to four years. Other research has shown that many people regain weight after stopping the drugs.The second analysis showed that patients in the trial reaped the heart benefits of Wegovy regardless of their weight when they started on the drug and regardless of how much weight they lost on it.For example, the reduced risk of serious cardiovascular events for those on Wegovy, compared with a placebo, was similar among people who lost 5% or more of their body weight, those who lost less than that or even those who gained weight.The finding suggests Wegovy helps improve a patient's heart health through methods beyond weight loss, the study authors concluded.Notably, the weight loss in the trial was less than the average 15% weight loss observed in an earlier study on Wegovy's effect on obesity.But the researchers in the first analysis noted that the previous study was designed specifically for weight loss and included structured lifestyle changes, such as diet and exercise. The population that study followed was also different from the SELECT trial.Safety results from the two analyses were consistent with the previous data from the SELECT trial. More people on Wegovy than people who got a placebo decided to stop participating in the trial because of side effects.Patients also experienced side effects consistent with other GLP-1 medications, such as nausea, diarrhea, vomiting and constipation.",CNBC,14/05/2024,"[""In this articlePatients taking Novo Nordisk's obesity drug Wegovy maintained an average of 10% weight loss for up to four years, according to a new analysis published Tuesday from the longest clinical trial to date on the treatment."", ""The highly popular drug also reduced the risk of heart disease regardless of a patient's weight, a second analysis on the same trial found."", 'Both analyses were presented at the European Congress on Obesity in Venice, Italy, this week.', ""The findings shed light on the long-term effects of Wegovy and add to growing evidence of the weekly injection's broad health benefits."", ""That could boost Novo Nordisk's case for insurers and governments to cover the costly but effective drug."", 'Insurance coverage is limited for Wegovy, part of a class of medications called GLP-1s.', ""Those obesity and diabetes treatments have soared in popularity over the last year and work by mimicking a hormone produced in the gut to suppress a person's appetite."", 'Neither Novo Nordisk or Eli Lilly, which has its own weight loss drug, have been able to produce enough supply to meet the insatiable demand for their treatments.', ""The two analyses build on data published in November from Novo Nordisk's SELECT trial."", 'The findings from that trial showed that Wegovy slashed the risk of heart attacks, stroke and other serious cardiovascular complications by 20% in people who have obesity or are overweight and also have cardiovascular disease.', 'The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Wegovy for that purpose in March.', 'The SELECT trial, which included more than 17,000 patients from over 40 countries, tested Wegovy for its cardiovascular benefits.', 'Participants were not required to track diet and exercise because it was not an obesity study.', 'Patients in the trial lost around 10% of their total body weight on average after 65 weeks on Wegovy, according to the first analysis published in the journal Nature.', 'Patients continued to take the weekly drug over a period of three years and four months and sustained their weight loss for up to four years.', 'Other research has shown that many people regain weight after stopping the drugs.', 'The second analysis showed that patients in the trial reaped the heart benefits of Wegovy regardless of their weight when they started on the drug and regardless of how much weight they lost on it.', 'For example, the reduced risk of serious cardiovascular events for those on Wegovy, compared with a placebo, was similar among people who lost 5% or more of their body weight, those who lost less than that or even those who gained weight.', ""The finding suggests Wegovy helps improve a patient's heart health through methods beyond weight loss, the study authors concluded."", ""Notably, the weight loss in the trial was less than the average 15% weight loss observed in an earlier study on Wegovy's effect on obesity."", 'But the researchers in the first analysis noted that the previous study was designed specifically for weight loss and included structured lifestyle changes, such as diet and exercise.', 'The population that study followed was also different from the SELECT trial.', 'Safety results from the two analyses were consistent with the previous data from the SELECT trial.', 'More people on Wegovy than people who got a placebo decided to stop participating in the trial because of side effects.', 'Patients also experienced side effects consistent with other GLP-1 medications, such as nausea, diarrhea, vomiting and constipation.']",-0.0272232112652656,That could boost Novo Nordisk's case for insurers and governments to cover the costly but effective drug.,"The findings from that trial showed that Wegovy slashed the risk of heart attacks, stroke and other serious cardiovascular complications by 20% in people who have obesity or are overweight and also have cardiovascular disease.",0.7400435487429301,Those obesity and diabetes treatments have soared in popularity over the last year and work by mimicking a hormone produced in the gut to suppress a person's appetite.,"Patients also experienced side effects consistent with other GLP-1 medications, such as nausea, diarrhea, vomiting and constipation.",2024-05-19 Roche says weight loss drug shows promising results in early trial,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/roche-weight-loss-drug-shows-promising-results-in-early-trial.html,2024-05-16T14:03:34+0000,"In this articleRoche on Thursday said its experimental weight loss drug showed promising results in an early-stage trial, boosting the company's bid to compete in the booming market for those treatments.The Swiss company joined a slate of drugmakers racing to develop obesity drugs through its almost $3 billion acquisition of Carmot Therapeutics in December. But its weekly weight loss injection, called CT-388, is still years away from entering the market.The weight loss drug space is dominated by treatments from Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly, and some analysts say the market will be worth $100 billion by the end of the decade.Roche's CT-388 helped patients with obesity lose 18.8% of their weight relative to those who received a placebo, after 24 weeks in the phase one trial, the company said.Roche added that all of the patients who received the drug lost more than 5% of their weight. Meanwhile, 70% of those people lost more than 15% of their weight, and 45% lost more than 20%.The treatment works by mimicking the effect of two gut hormones — GLP-1 and GIP — to suppress a person's appetite, just like Eli Lilly's popular weight loss drug Zepbound and diabetes injection Mounjaro.Scientists have hypothesized that targeting those two hormones could have a meaningful effect on weight loss and blood sugar levels with fewer side effects than drugs that only target GLP-1, such as Novo Nordisk's weight loss treatment Wegovy.Roche's CT-388 is being developed to treat both obesity and diabetes.Roche said it did not observe any new or unexpected side effects in patients taking CT-388. The company noted that mild to moderate gastrointestinal side effects were the most common, consistent with other weight loss and diabetes drugs that work the same way.CT-388 also normalized blood sugar levels in a subgroup of patients with pre-diabetes.Roche said it is testing CT-388 in an additional group of patients with obesity and diabetes over 12 weeks. The company expects data from those patients in the second half of the year.Eli Lilly's Zepbound delivered up to 22% weight loss after 72 weeks, while Novo Nordisk's Wegovy has led to 15% weight loss after 68 weeks.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"[""In this articleRoche on Thursday saidits experimental weight loss drug showed promising results in an early-stage trial, boosting the company's bid to compete in the booming market for those treatments."", 'The Swiss company joined a slate of drugmakers racing to develop obesity drugs through its almost $3 billion acquisition of Carmot Therapeutics in December.', 'But its weekly weight loss injection, called CT-388, is still years away from entering the market.', 'The weight loss drug space is dominated by treatments from Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly, and some analysts say the market will be worth $100 billion by the end of the decade.', ""Roche's CT-388 helped patients with obesity lose 18.8% of their weight relative to those who received a placebo, after 24 weeksin the phase one trial, the company said."", 'Roche added that all of the patients who received the drug lost more than 5% of their weight.', ""Meanwhile, 70% of those people lost more than 15% of their weight, and 45% lost more than 20%.The treatment works by mimicking the effect of two gut hormones — GLP-1 and GIP — to suppress a person's appetite, just like Eli Lilly's popular weight loss drug Zepbound and diabetes injection Mounjaro."", ""Scientists have hypothesized that targeting those two hormones could have a meaningful effect on weight loss and blood sugar levels with fewer side effects than drugs that only target GLP-1, such as Novo Nordisk's weight loss treatment Wegovy."", ""Roche's CT-388 is being developed to treat both obesity and diabetes."", 'Roche said it did not observe any new or unexpected side effects in patients taking CT-388.', 'The company noted that mild to moderate gastrointestinal side effects were the most common, consistent with other weight loss and diabetes drugs that work the same way.', 'CT-388 also normalized blood sugar levels in a subgroup of patients with pre-diabetes.', 'Roche said it is testing CT-388 in an additional group of patients with obesity and diabetes over 12 weeks.', 'The company expects data from those patients in the second half of the year.', ""Eli Lilly's Zepbound delivered up to 22% weight loss after 72 weeks, while Novo Nordisk's Wegovy has led to 15% weight loss after 68 weeks.""]",-0.1197380032998948,"In this articleRoche on Thursday saidits experimental weight loss drug showed promising results in an early-stage trial, boosting the company's bid to compete in the booming market for those treatments.","Eli Lilly's Zepbound delivered up to 22% weight loss after 72 weeks, while Novo Nordisk's Wegovy has led to 15% weight loss after 68 weeks.",0.9663981000582376,"In this articleRoche on Thursday saidits experimental weight loss drug showed promising results in an early-stage trial, boosting the company's bid to compete in the booming market for those treatments.",,2024-05-19 Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama vote against UAW union membership,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/17/uaw-vote-mercedes-benz-alabama.html,2024-05-17T21:24:27+0000,"Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama have voted against union representation by the United Auto Workers, the National Labor Relations Board said Friday.The results are a blow to the UAW's organizing efforts a month after the Detroit union won an organizing drive of roughly 4,330 Volkswagen plant workers in Tennessee. Voting started Monday and ended Friday.Union organizing failed with 56% of the vote, or 2,642 workers, casting ballots against the UAW, according to the NLRB, which oversaw the election. More than 90% of the 5,075 eligible Mercedes-Benz workers voted in the election, according to the results.The NLRB said 51 ballots were challenged and not counted, but they aren't determinative to the outcome of the election. There were five void ballots. The union and company have five business days to file objections to the election, including any alleged interference, according to the NLRB. If no objections are filed, the election result will be certified, and the union will have to wait one year to file for a union election for a similar bargaining unit.Mercedes-Benz in a statement said company officials ""look forward to continuing to work directly with our Team Members to ensure [Mercedes-Benz US International] is not only their employer of choice, but a place they would recommend to friends and family.""The loss is expected to hurt the UAW in an unprecedented organizing drive launched late last year of 13 non-union automakers in the U.S. after securing record contracts with Detroit automakers Ford Motor, General Motors and Stellantis. Those agreements included significant wage increase, reinstatement of cost-of-living adjustments and other benefits.UAW President Shawn Fain said while the Mercedes-Benz vote was obviously not the result the union wanted, it was a valiant effort, adding the vote ""isn't a failure"" but a ""bump in the road.""""While this loss stings, I'll tell you this, we're going to keep our heads up, keep our heads up high. These workers have nothing to do but be proud in the effort they put forth and what they've done,"" he said Friday during a media conference. ""We fought the good fight and we're going to continue on, continue forward. Ultimately, these workers here are going to win.""The Mercedes-Benz vote was expected to be more challenging for the union than the Volkswagen plant in Tennessee, where the union had already established a presence after two failed organizing drives in the past decade and where it faced less opposition from the automaker.Stephen Silvia, author of ""The UAW's Southern Gamble: Organizing Workers at Foreign-Owned Vehicle Plants,"" noted Mercedes-Benz replaced the plant's leader weeks ahead of the election. He said companies routinely do this, promising workers changes at their facilities in an effort to stave of organizing.""Companies do anti-union campaigns because they can be effective, and I think this one was effective,"" said Silvia, a professor at American University in Washington, D.C. ""A common piece of an anti-union campaign is firing the plant manager ... That seems to have persuaded enough of the workers to vote against the union.""Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey, who was one of six Republican governors to condemn the union's organizing drive, hailed the outcome of the vote.""The workers in Vance have spoken, and they have spoken clearly! Alabama is not Michigan, and we are not the Sweet Home to the UAW. We urge the UAW to respect the results of this secret ballot election,"" she said.Workers at Mercedes-Benz's Tuscaloosa plant, located about 60 miles southwest of Birmingham, have produced more than 4 million vehicles since the plant opened in 1997, including 295,000 vehicles in 2023, according to the plant's website.The Alabama plant currently produces vehicles such as the gas-powered GLE and GLS Maybach SUVs as well as the all-electric EQS and EQE SUVs.The NLRB last week said it continues to process and investigate open unfair labor practice charges filed by the UAW against automakers, including six unfair labor practice charges against Mercedes-Benz since March.Fain said Friday the union would continue to move forward with those charges. He declined to say whether the union plans to challenge the election results, saying he'd ""leave that"" to the union's legal team.The charges allege that Mercedes-Benz has ""disciplined employees for discussing unionization at work, prohibited distribution of union materials and paraphernalia, surveilled employees, discharged union supporters, forced employees to attend captive audience meetings, and made statements suggesting that union activity is futile,"" the NLRB said.The union has filed other charges against automakers Honda, Hyundai, Lucid, Rivian, Tesla and Toyota, according to the NLRB.",CNBC,17/05/2024,"['Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama have voted against union representation by the United Auto Workers, the National Labor Relations Board said Friday.', ""The results are a blow to the UAW's organizing efforts a month after the Detroit union won an organizing drive of roughly 4,330 Volkswagen plant workers in Tennessee."", 'Voting started Monday and ended Friday.', 'Union organizing failed with 56% of the vote, or 2,642 workers, casting ballots against the UAW, according to the NLRB, which oversaw the election.', 'More than 90% of the 5,075 eligible Mercedes-Benz workers voted in the election, according to the results.', ""The NLRB said 51 ballots were challenged and not counted, but they aren't determinative to the outcome of the election."", 'There were five void ballots.', 'The union and company have five business days to file objections to the election, including any alleged interference, accordingto the NLRB.', 'If no objections are filed, the election result will be certified, and the union will have to wait one year to file for a union election for a similar bargaining unit.', 'Mercedes-Benz in a statement said company officials ""look forward to continuing to work directly with our Team Members to ensure [Mercedes-Benz US International] is not only their employer of choice, but a place they would recommend to friends and family.', '""The loss is expected to hurt the UAW in an unprecedented organizing drive launched late last year of 13 non-union automakers in the U.S. after securing record contracts with Detroit automakers Ford Motor, General Motors and Stellantis.', 'Those agreements included significant wage increase, reinstatement of cost-of-living adjustments and other benefits.', 'UAW President Shawn Fain said while the Mercedes-Benz vote was obviously not the result the union wanted, it was a valiant effort, adding the vote ""isn\'t a failure"" but a ""bump in the road.', '""""While this loss stings, I\'ll tell you this, we\'re going to keep our heads up, keep our heads up high.', 'These workers have nothing to do but be proud in the effort they put forth and what they\'ve done,"" he said Friday during a media conference. ""', ""We fought the good fight and we're going to continue on, continue forward."", 'Ultimately, these workers here are going to win.', '""The Mercedes-Benz vote was expected to be more challenging for the union than the Volkswagen plant in Tennessee, where the union had already established a presence after two failed organizing drives in the past decade and where it faced less opposition from the automaker.', 'Stephen Silvia,authorof ""The UAW\'s Southern Gamble: Organizing Workers at Foreign-Owned Vehicle Plants,"" noted Mercedes-Benz replaced the plant\'s leader weeks ahead of the election.', 'He said companies routinely do this, promising workers changes at their facilities in an effort to stave of organizing.', '""Companies do anti-union campaigns because they can be effective, and I think this one was effective,"" said Silvia, a professor at American University in Washington, D.C. ""A common piece of an anti-union campaign is firing the plant manager ... That seems to have persuaded enough of the workers to vote against the union.', '""Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey, who was one of six Republican governors to condemn the union\'s organizing drive, hailed the outcome of the vote.', '""The workers in Vance have spoken, and they have spoken clearly!', 'Alabama is not Michigan, and we are not the Sweet Home to the UAW.', 'We urge the UAW to respect the results of this secret ballot election,"" she said.', ""Workers at Mercedes-Benz's Tuscaloosa plant, located about 60 miles southwest of Birmingham, have produced more than 4 million vehicles since the plant opened in 1997, including 295,000 vehicles in 2023, according to the plant's website."", 'The Alabama plant currently produces vehicles such as the gas-powered GLE and GLS Maybach SUVs as well as the all-electric EQS and EQE SUVs.', 'The NLRB last week said it continues to process and investigate open unfair labor practice charges filed by the UAW against automakers, including six unfair labor practice charges against Mercedes-Benz since March.', 'Fain said Friday the union would continue to move forward with those charges.', 'He declined to say whether the union plans to challenge the election results, saying he\'d ""leave that"" to the union\'s legal team.', 'The charges allege that Mercedes-Benz has ""disciplined employees for discussing unionization at work, prohibited distribution of union materials and paraphernalia, surveilled employees, discharged union supporters, forced employees to attend captive audience meetings, and made statements suggesting that union activity is futile,"" the NLRB said.', 'The union has filed other charges against automakers Honda, Hyundai, Lucid, Rivian, Tesla and Toyota, according to the NLRB.']",0.0311893796263664,"Mercedes-Benz in a statement said company officials ""look forward to continuing to work directly with our Team Members to ensure [Mercedes-Benz US International] is not only their employer of choice, but a place they would recommend to friends and family.","The NLRB last week said it continues to process and investigate open unfair labor practice charges filed by the UAW against automakers, including six unfair labor practice charges against Mercedes-Benz since March.",0.2721788287162781,"Those agreements included significant wage increase, reinstatement of cost-of-living adjustments and other benefits.","""The loss is expected to hurt the UAW in an unprecedented organizing drive launched late last year of 13 non-union automakers in the U.S. after securing record contracts with Detroit automakers Ford Motor, General Motors and Stellantis.",2024-05-19 Boeing shareholders re-elect departing CEO Calhoun to board,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/17/boeing-calhoun-reelected-shareholder-vote.html,2024-05-17T16:46:44+0000,"In this articleBoeing shareholders voted to re-elect the outgoing CEO Dave Calhoun to the board of directors, a preliminary tally on Friday showed, as he sought to reassure investors that the manufacturer is on the path to stability amid its latest safety crisis.Calhoun in March said he will step down by year's end, months after a door plug panel blew out midflight from a Boeing 737 Max 9, ushering in new scrutiny of the manufacturer's safety and quality control issues. Boeing also replaced its board chair and the head of its commercial airplane unit in the shakeup.Boeing's new chairman, Steve Mollenkopf, told shareholders at the company's annual meeting Friday that he has consulted with investors and customers on Calhoun's successor. Proxy advisor Glass Lewis had recommended that shareholders vote against Calhoun and two other board members.Boeing's latest problems have driven down deliveries of new aircraft, frustrating airline executives who have complained about having to change their flight schedules and scale back staffing. It has also further strained Boeing's relationship with its regulator, the Federal Aviation Administration, which has ramped up inspections of the manufacturer.Earlier this week, the Justice Department said Boeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected the company from criminal charges tied to the two fatal 737 Max crashes, opening Boeing up to potential U.S. prosecution.",CNBC,17/05/2024,"['In this articleBoeing shareholders voted to re-elect the outgoing CEO Dave Calhoun to the board of directors, a preliminary tally on Friday showed, as he sought to reassure investors that the manufacturer is on the path to stability amid its latest safety crisis.', ""Calhoun in March said he will step down by year's end, months after a door plug panel blew out midflight from a Boeing 737 Max 9, ushering in new scrutiny of the manufacturer's safety and quality control issues."", 'Boeing also replaced its board chair and the head of its commercial airplane unit in the shakeup.', ""Boeing's new chairman, Steve Mollenkopf, told shareholders at the company's annual meeting Friday that he has consulted with investors and customers on Calhoun's successor."", 'Proxy advisor Glass Lewis had recommended that shareholders vote against Calhoun and two other board members.', ""Boeing's latest problems have driven down deliveries of new aircraft, frustrating airline executives who have complained about having to change their flight schedules and scale back staffing."", ""It has also further strained Boeing's relationship with its regulator, the Federal Aviation Administration, which has ramped up inspections of the manufacturer."", 'Earlier this week, the Justice Department said Boeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected the company from criminal charges tied to the two fatal 737 Max crashes, opening Boeing up to potential U.S. prosecution.']",-0.1307499503462509,"Calhoun in March said he will step down by year's end, months after a door plug panel blew out midflight from a Boeing 737 Max 9, ushering in new scrutiny of the manufacturer's safety and quality control issues.","Earlier this week, the Justice Department said Boeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected the company from criminal charges tied to the two fatal 737 Max crashes, opening Boeing up to potential U.S. prosecution.",-0.2865927815437317,"Earlier this week, the Justice Department said Boeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected the company from criminal charges tied to the two fatal 737 Max crashes, opening Boeing up to potential U.S. prosecution.","Boeing's latest problems have driven down deliveries of new aircraft, frustrating airline executives who have complained about having to change their flight schedules and scale back staffing.",2024-05-19 Biden's EV tariffs may not be enough to stave off the threat of Chinese vehicles in the U.S.,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/15/china-biden-ev-tariffs-may-not-be-enough-to-stave-off-growing-threat.html,2024-05-15T19:46:13+0000,"DETROIT — President Joe Biden's plan to quadruple tariffs on China-made electric vehicles is unlikely to stave off the threat of more Chinese cars on the auto sales market in the U.S.The 100% tariff announced Tuesday, up from a current import tax of about 25%, covers EVs imported from China but could still leave room for the often-cheap Chinese models to undercut domestic prices and leaves loopholes for imports made by Chinese automakers in other countries, like neighboring Mexico. It also does nothing to address current or future gas-powered vehicles imported from the Communist country to the U.S.Automotive and trade experts say the increased tariffs are a near-term protectionism act that may delay but won't stop Chinese automakers from coming to the U.S. with EVs.""They're going to be here. It's inevitable. It's just a matter of time,"" said Dan Hearsch, Americas co-leader of automotive and industrial practice at consulting firm AlixPartners. ""Western automakers, Western suppliers really ought to be upping their game and preparing to take this on or play with them. It's one or the other.""The EV tariffs, including other increases regarding battery materials, were among new tariff rates on $18 billion worth of Chinese imports.For decades, Chinese auto companies have said they will begin selling vehicles in the U.S. under their own brands, but none have succeeded.The quality of Chinese automakers' vehicles has gotten significantly better in recent years, as Beijing has helped by subsidizing their operations to grow domestic production. The increase in domestic automakers has led to a rapid deterioration of market share in the country for global automakers such as General Motors.Global players have made more inroads in the U.S. market in recent years. The so-called Big Three U.S. automakers — GM, Ford Motor and Chrysler, now owned by Stellantis — have watched their market share in the country deteriorate from 75% in 1984 to about 40% in 2023, according to industry data.GM and others have found it hard to compete against budget and mainstream Chinese vehicles, including EVs. For example, a small EV from Warren Buffett-backed BYD called the Seagull starts at around $10,000 and reportedly banks a profit for the increasingly influential Chinese automaker.Though the Seagull isn't yet sold on U.S. soil, BYD is expanding its vehicles globally, and some believe it's only a matter of time before more China-made vehicles arrive in the U.S.Even with the new 100% tariff, its pricing would likely be in line with or better than many EVs currently on sale in the U.S.""Ultimately, we think protectionism from the West could remain a near-term overhang for Chinese EV/parts makers aiming for rapid global expansion, but we think it is unlikely to halt China's EV push in the long run,"" Morgan Stanley analyst Tim Hsiao said in an investor note this week.Though some automakers currently import gas-powered vehicles from China into the U.S., the numbers are small. Wall Street analysts, citing the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, report fewer than 75,000 vehicles were imported into the U.S. last year.Vehicles made in China and currently sold in the U.S. include GM's gas-powered Buick Envision, Ford's Lincoln Nautilus and two all-electric vehicles from Geely-owned Volvo and its spinoff EV startup Polestar.Polestar, with a small lineup of vehicles, is notably reliant on its Chinese imports. The company, in a statement, said it is ""currently evaluating the announcement of tariff increases from the Biden Administration,"" saying it believes ""free trade is essential to speed up the transition to more sustainable mobility through increased EV adoption.""Biden's focus on China-made EVs — and the exclusion of gas-powered vehicles in the higher levies — fits with the White House's clean energy agenda, which has emphasized electric vehicle production and adoption as well as enhanced U.S. charging infrastructure.""EVs are where we're focused in terms of placing tariffs, because that's where we've made hundreds of billions of dollars of public investments. We've made those investments to build resilience in our clean technology supply chains. And so that's our focus here,"" a senior administration official told reporters this week.It's possible U.S. officials are taking a warning sign from Europe, where Chinese automakers have quickly flooded markets with gas-saving EVs and undercut domestic automakers.Chinese companies accounted for 8% of Europe's all-electric vehicle sales as of September and could increase their share to 15% by 2025, the European Union said in October 2023. The EU believes Chinese EVs are undercutting the prices of local models by about 20%.The Biden administration's new EV tariffs could have a ripple effect on other countries, including in Europe, if they're successful in stemming Chinese exports, according to Coco Zhang, vice president of ESG research at ING Group.She said similar tariffs elsewhere could force Chinese companies to move more quickly to establish local production operations or joint ventures with other companies in an attempt to lower export costs.""From China's perspective, if there can be supply or other sorts of partnerships, they can still find their way going into the U.S. market,"" Zhang said.Such moves would be reminiscent of how Japanese automakers such as Toyota Motor and Nissan Motor as well as South Korea's Hyundai Motor, including Kia Motors, entered the U.S. market in recent decades.– CNBC's Rebecca Picciotto and Michael Bloom contributed to this report.",CNBC,15/05/2024,"[""DETROIT — President Joe Biden's plan to quadruple tariffs on China-made electric vehicles is unlikely to stave off the threat of more Chinese cars on the auto sales market in the U.S.The 100% tariff announced Tuesday, up from a current import tax of about 25%, covers EVs imported from China but could still leave room for the often-cheap Chinese models to undercut domestic prices and leaves loopholes for imports made by Chinese automakers in other countries, like neighboring Mexico."", ""It also does nothing to address current or future gas-powered vehicles imported from the Communist country to the U.S.Automotive and trade experts say the increased tariffs are a near-term protectionism act that may delay but won't stop Chinese automakers from coming to the U.S. with EVs."", '""They\'re going to be here.', ""It's inevitable."", 'It\'s just a matter of time,"" said Dan Hearsch, Americas co-leader of automotive and industrial practice at consulting firm AlixPartners. ""', 'Western automakers, Western suppliers really ought to be upping their game and preparing to take this on or play with them.', ""It's one or the other."", '""The EV tariffs, including other increases regarding battery materials, were among new tariff rates on $18 billion worth of Chinese imports.', 'For decades, Chinese auto companies have said they will begin selling vehicles in the U.S. under their own brands, but none have succeeded.', ""The quality of Chinese automakers' vehicles has gotten significantly better in recent years, as Beijing has helped by subsidizing their operations to grow domestic production."", 'The increase in domestic automakers has led to a rapid deterioration of market share in the country for global automakers such as General Motors.', 'Global players have made more inroads in the U.S. market in recent years.', 'The so-called Big Three U.S. automakers — GM, FordMotor and Chrysler, now owned byStellantis— have watched their market share in the country deteriorate from 75% in 1984 to about 40% in 2023, according to industry data.', 'GM and others have found it hard to compete against budget and mainstream Chinese vehicles, including EVs.', 'For example, a small EV from Warren Buffett-backed BYD called the Seagull starts at around $10,000 and reportedly banks a profit for the increasingly influential Chinese automaker.', 'Though the Seagull isn\'t yet sold on U.S. soil, BYD is expanding its vehicles globally, and some believe it\'s only a matter of time before more China-made vehicles arrive in the U.S.Even with the new 100% tariff, its pricing would likely be in line with or better than many EVs currently on sale in the U.S.""Ultimately, we think protectionism from the West could remain a near-term overhang for Chinese EV/parts makers aiming for rapid global expansion, but we think it is unlikely to halt China\'s EV push in the long run,"" Morgan Stanley analyst Tim Hsiao said in an investor note this week.', 'Though some automakers currently import gas-powered vehicles from China into the U.S., the numbers are small.', 'Wall Street analysts, citing the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, report fewer than 75,000 vehicles were imported into the U.S. last year.', ""Vehicles made in China and currently sold in the U.S. include GM's gas-powered Buick Envision, Ford's Lincoln Nautilus and two all-electric vehicles from Geely-owned Volvo and its spinoff EV startup Polestar."", 'Polestar, with a small lineup of vehicles, is notably reliant on its Chinese imports.', 'The company, in a statement, said it is ""currently evaluating the announcement of tariff increases from the Biden Administration,"" saying it believes ""free trade is essential to speed up the transition to more sustainable mobility through increased EV adoption.', '""Biden\'s focus on China-made EVs — and the exclusion of gas-powered vehicles in the higher levies — fits with the White House\'s clean energy agenda, which has emphasized electric vehicle production and adoption as well as enhanced U.S. charging infrastructure.', '""EVs are where we\'re focused in terms of placing tariffs, because that\'s where we\'ve made hundreds of billions of dollars of public investments.', ""We've made those investments to build resilience in our clean technology supply chains."", 'And so that\'s our focus here,"" a senior administration official told reporters this week.', ""It's possible U.S. officials are taking a warning sign from Europe, where Chinese automakers have quickly flooded markets with gas-saving EVs and undercut domestic automakers."", ""Chinese companies accounted for 8% of Europe's all-electric vehicle sales as of September and could increase their share to 15% by 2025, the European Union said in October 2023."", ""The EU believes Chinese EVs are undercutting the prices of local models by about 20%.The Biden administration's new EV tariffs could have a ripple effect on other countries, including in Europe, if they're successful in stemming Chinese exports, according to Coco Zhang, vice president of ESG research at ING Group."", 'She said similar tariffs elsewhere could force Chinese companies to move more quickly to establish local production operations or joint ventures with other companies in an attempt to lower export costs.', '""From China\'s perspective, if there can be supply or other sorts of partnerships, they can still find their way going into the U.S. market,"" Zhang said.', ""Such moves would be reminiscent of how Japanese automakers such as Toyota Motor and Nissan Motor as well as South Korea's Hyundai Motor, including Kia Motors, entered the U.S. market in recent decades.–"", ""CNBC's Rebecca Picciotto and Michael Bloom contributed to this report.""]",0.1305594935970119,"For example, a small EV from Warren Buffett-backed BYD called the Seagull starts at around $10,000 and reportedly banks a profit for the increasingly influential Chinese automaker.","Such moves would be reminiscent of how Japanese automakers such as Toyota Motor and Nissan Motor as well as South Korea's Hyundai Motor, including Kia Motors, entered the U.S. market in recent decades.–",0.0812817851702372,"The quality of Chinese automakers' vehicles has gotten significantly better in recent years, as Beijing has helped by subsidizing their operations to grow domestic production.",The increase in domestic automakers has led to a rapid deterioration of market share in the country for global automakers such as General Motors.,2024-05-19 It’s back: Targeted Amex card holders can get up to 30% off at Amazon,https://edition.cnn.com/cnn-underscored/deals/amazon-amex-discount-promotion," 11:21 AM EST, Wed February 14, 2024 ","Most American Express card members typically think of their Amex points as opportunities for amazing travel opportunities. While that’s true, there’s another lesser-known use for them — redeeming them for purchases at Amazon. Right now, you may be eligible for an Amazon promotion where you can save big on Amazon purchases by redeeming as little as one Amex point. Targeted American Express card members can save as much as 30% on their next Amazon purchase, for up to $30 in savings when you use Amex points to pay for at least a portion of your purchase at checkout. However, your offer may be higher or lower. This offer is set to expire on June 30, 2024, so even if you aren’t in the market to shop at Amazon right now, you have some time to take advantage of the savings. That said, Amazon also states it will deactivate the offer after 24,167 customers have redeemed it. With many Amazon discounted offers, scoring the deal can be a little complicated. But we’re going to take you through it step by step to make sure you’re getting as much of a discount as possible when you’re shopping at Amazon. To start, you must have an American Express card that earns Membership Rewards points. Amex cards that earn other types of rewards, such as cash back or airline miles, won’t work. But there are plenty of Amex cards that earn Membership Rewards points — a small sampling of them is at the end of this story. Next, you’ll need to link your Amazon and American Express accounts. Add your American Express card as a payment method in your Amazon account, if you haven’t already. Then look for the option to enroll in “Shop with Points” under the “Your Account” tab, and click the “Enroll” button for the Amex card you just added. Once your accounts are connected, you’ll need to activate the offer by clicking on this link. Remember, this is a targeted promotion, so not everyone will be eligible for it — you could be targeted for any one of the offers or none of them. When you click on the link, if you see a message that you’re not eligible, then you’re unfortunately not targeted for this particular promotion. But even if you’re not targeted, don’t give up hope. If you just enrolled in “Shop with Points,” you may need to wait 24 hours for Amazon’s records to refresh before knowing if you’re targeted, so check back in a day or so. If you’re eligible, activate the offer by clicking on the “Activate now” button — the enrollment page will indicate your particular discount. You can then shop at Amazon as you normally would, though only products sold and shipped by Amazon are eligible for these discounts. Additionally, Amazon gift cards are excluded, though other third-party retailer gift cards sold by Amazon might be eligible. But wait! There’s one more step. When you’re ready to check out, you’ll want to make sure to select your linked American Express card as your payment method. Then you’ll need to use at least 1 point to pay for your purchase for the discount to apply. When paying with Amex Membership Rewards points at Amazon, 1 point equals 0.7 cents. That’s not the best value you can get for Amex points. Frequent flyer website The Points Guy values Membership Rewards points as high as 2 cents each when redeemed for travel. However, it’s important to note that you don’t have to pay for your entire Amazon purchase with points to get these discounts. In fact, you can use just 1 point and pay for the rest with your Amex card, and you’ll still see the discount applied to your order. However, some accounts might see that you need to redeem slightly more points — 714 to be exact — to receive the savings, so make sure to check the terms of your exact offer. To pay with the minimum number of points required, enter $0.01 in the points section at checkout, which will apply just 1 point to your payment, You can use any number of points you want, but if you don’t make this change, Amazon may automatically apply the maximum number of points to cover the entire purchase, so you’ll want to make sure to update the amount before you place the order. Once you’ve applied at least 1 point to your payment, you’ll see the discount added to your order. The discount will apply on every order you place through June 30 until you hit the total maximum in savings — which will depend on your particular offer. Let’s take a look at some examples of how you can apply this discount to your upcoming Amazon purchases, even if you don’t need anything from Amazon right at the moment. With airlines having regular delays and cancellations over the last year, placing an Apple AirTag on your luggage can be a great way to track the location of your belongings. An Apple AirTag 4 Pack is currently priced at $78.99 before taxes and shipping, but if you’re targeted for the 30% off American Express offer, that’ll bring the pack down to $55.30, or around $13.83 per AirTag before tax. Or, if you’re hoping to pick up a set of new Apple AirPods Pro 2, right now Amazon is selling them for $189.99. But you can knock that down even further to as low as $159.99 before taxes if you’re targeted for this offer. Even if you aren’t eligible for any of these particular Amex promotions, offers like this typically resurface many times throughout the year, so keep on checking back. Amazon often runs similar promotions for other credit cards, so check out our guides to discounts for Chase and Discover card holders to see what’s available. You might also find that even if you aren’t eligible now for one of these offers, you could magically become targeted in a few weeks, so keep on checking the link to see if you’ve been granted access. Amazon has been eagerly offers some lucrative promotions over the last few years, so keep your credit card accounts linked to your Amazon account, and if you’re targeted for any of these offers, make sure you use them before they expire at the end of the year. Also, make sure you read our guide to the best credit cards for Amazon to be sure you’re using the right card when you buy at Amazon. Looking for a travel credit card? Find out which cards CNN Underscored Money chose as the best travel credit cards currently available.",CNN,14/02/2024,"['Most American Express card members typically think of their Amex points as opportunities for amazing travel opportunities.', 'While that’s true, there’s another lesser-known use for them — redeeming them for purchases at Amazon.', 'Right now, you may be eligible for anAmazonpromotion where you can save big on Amazon purchases by redeeming as little as one Amex point.', 'Targeted American Express card members cansave as much as 30% on their next Amazon purchase, for up to $30 in savings when you use Amex points to pay for at least a portion of your purchase at checkout.', 'However, your offer may be higher or lower.', 'This offer is set to expire on June 30, 2024, so even if you aren’t in the market to shop at Amazon right now, you have some time to take advantage of the savings.', 'That said, Amazon also states it will deactivate the offer after 24,167 customers have redeemed it.', 'With many Amazon discounted offers, scoring the deal can be a little complicated.', 'But we’re going to take you through it step by step to make sure you’re getting as much of a discount as possible when you’re shopping atAmazon.', 'To start, you must have an American Express card that earns Membership Rewards points.', 'Amex cards that earn other types of rewards, such as cash back or airline miles, won’t work.', 'But there are plenty of Amex cards that earn Membership Rewards points — a small sampling of them is at the end of this story.', 'Next, you’ll need tolink your Amazon and American Express accounts.', 'Add your American Express card as a payment method in your Amazon account, if you haven’t already.', 'Then look for the option toenroll in “Shop with Points”under the “Your Account” tab, and click the “Enroll” button for the Amex card you just added.', 'Once your accounts are connected, you’ll need to activate the offer byclicking on this link.', 'Remember, this is a targeted promotion, so not everyone will be eligible for it — you could be targeted for any one of the offers or none of them.', 'When you click on the link, if you see a message that you’re not eligible, then you’re unfortunately not targeted for this particular promotion.', 'But even if you’re not targeted, don’t give up hope.', 'If you just enrolled in “Shop with Points,” you may need to wait 24 hours for Amazon’s records to refresh before knowing if you’re targeted, so check back in a day or so.', 'If you’re eligible, activate the offer byclicking on the “Activate now” button— the enrollment page will indicate your particular discount.', 'You can thenshop at Amazonas you normally would, though only products sold and shipped by Amazon are eligible for these discounts.', 'Additionally, Amazon gift cards are excluded, though otherthird-party retailer gift cardssold by Amazon might be eligible.', 'But wait!', 'There’s one more step.', 'When you’re ready to check out, you’ll want to make sure to select your linked American Express card as your payment method.', 'Then you’ll need to use at least 1 point to pay for your purchase for the discount to apply.', 'When paying with Amex Membership Rewards points at Amazon, 1 point equals 0.7 cents.', 'That’s not the best value you can get for Amex points.', 'Frequent flyer websiteThe Points Guyvalues Membership Rewards points as high as 2 cents each when redeemed for travel.', 'However, it’s important to note that you don’t have to pay for your entireAmazonpurchase with points to get these discounts.', 'In fact,you can use just 1 point and pay for the rest with your Amex card, and you’ll still see the discount applied to your order.', 'However, some accounts might see that you need to redeem slightly more points —714 to be exact —to receive the savings, so make sure to check the terms of your exact offer.', 'To pay with the minimum number of points required, enter $0.01 in the points section at checkout, which will apply just 1 point to your payment, You can use any number of points you want, but if you don’t make this change,Amazonmay automatically apply the maximum number of points to cover the entire purchase, so you’ll want to make sure to update the amount before you place the order.', 'Once you’ve applied at least 1 point to your payment, you’ll see the discount added to your order.', 'The discount will apply on every order you place through June 30 until you hit the total maximum in savings —which will depend on your particular offer.', 'Let’s take a look at some examples of how you can apply this discount to your upcomingAmazonpurchases, even if you don’t need anything from Amazon right at the moment.', 'With airlines having regular delays and cancellations over the last year, placing an Apple AirTag on your luggage can be a great way to track the location of your belongings.', 'An Apple AirTag 4 Pack is currently priced at $78.99 before taxes and shipping, but if you’re targeted for the 30% off American Express offer, that’ll bring the pack down to $55.30, or around $13.83 per AirTag before tax.', 'Or, if you’re hoping to pick up a set of new Apple AirPods Pro 2, right now Amazon is selling them for $189.99.', 'But you can knock that down even further to as low as $159.99 before taxes if you’re targeted for this offer.', 'Even if you aren’t eligible for any of these particular Amex promotions, offers like this typically resurface many times throughout the year, so keep on checking back.', 'Amazon often runs similar promotions for other credit cards, so check out our guides to discounts for Chase and Discover card holders to see what’s available.', 'You might also find that even if you aren’t eligible now for one of these offers, you could magically become targeted in a few weeks, so keep on checking the link to see if you’ve been granted access.', 'Amazon has been eagerly offers some lucrative promotions over the last few years, sokeep your credit card accounts linked to your Amazon account, and if you’re targeted for any of these offers, make sure you use them before they expire at the end of the year.', 'Also, make sure you read our guide to thebest credit cards for Amazonto be sure you’re using the right card when you buy at Amazon.', 'Looking for a travel credit card?', 'Find out which cardsCNN Underscored Moneychose as thebest travel credit cardscurrently available.']",0.2766683229921542,Most American Express card members typically think of their Amex points as opportunities for amazing travel opportunities.,That’s not the best value you can get for Amex points.,-0.0578339397907257,"Amazon has been eagerly offers some lucrative promotions over the last few years, sokeep your credit card accounts linked to your Amazon account, and if you’re targeted for any of these offers, make sure you use them before they expire at the end of the year.",But you can knock that down even further to as low as $159.99 before taxes if you’re targeted for this offer.,2024-05-19 Frontier Airlines does away with change fees in budget airline pricing overhaul,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/17/frontier-airlines-change-fees-scrapped.html,2024-05-17T17:18:08+0000,"In this articleFrontier Airlines said it will stop charging customers a fee to change their flights, taking a page from larger competitors as the Biden administration issues stricter rules targeting so-called ""junk fees.""The change is part of an overhaul announced on Friday of the budget airline's longtime pricing model, which brings customers in the door with eye-catching low base fares but charges a fee for everything else such as seating assignments and carry-on baggage. That model is shared by fellow discounter Spirit Airlines.Frontier said it will start offering packages that include some of those add-ons, among others, such as early boarding. While some fares will still allow travelers to add on options a la carte, ""we expect that option to be a minority of customers,"" Frontier CEO Barry Biffle told CNBC.A new ""economy"" bundle that comes with a carry-on and a seat assignment will start at $30 more than a basic fare, while a ""premium"" bundle that offers those perks plus earlier boarding will be $50 more than the basic fare. For at least $100 more than a basic fare, ""business"" bundle travelers will also be able to check two bags and get a seat at the front of the plane with more room.Last month, the U.S. Department of Transportation issued a final rule that requires airlines to tell customers about fees, including those for checked or carry-on baggage, up front, a change the DOT said would save travelers more than half a billion dollars a year.Frontier currently charges up to $99 to change flights if the change is made within a week of the trip, according to the airline's website. Larger rivals Delta, American and United scrapped change fees during the Covid-19 pandemic for travelers who were booked in standard economy class and above. Southwest Airlines does not charge customers to change their tickets.""The truth is the big four [U.S. airlines] all have no change fees on the majority of their products, so we were not as desirable,"" Biffle said. He said change fees were a ""top complaint"" of travelers. Travelers who buy the cheapest option on Frontier will still have to pay to change their flights.Frontier also said flight credits would be valid for 12 months, up from three months, starting with tickets issued on Friday, and that it will reintroduce live phone support for travelers flying within 24 hours or to elite members of its frequent flyer program.",CNBC,17/05/2024,"['In this articleFrontier Airlines said it will stop charging customers a fee to change their flights, taking a page from larger competitors as the Biden administration issues stricter rules targeting so-called ""junk fees.', '""The change is part of an overhaul announced on Friday of the budget airline\'s longtime pricing model, which brings customers in the door with eye-catching low base fares but charges a fee for everything else such as seating assignments and carry-on baggage.', 'That model is shared by fellow discounter Spirit Airlines.', 'Frontier said it will start offering packages that include some of those add-ons, among others, such as early boarding.', 'While some fares will still allow travelers to add on options a la carte, ""we expect that option to be a minority of customers,"" Frontier CEO Barry Biffle told CNBC.A new ""economy"" bundle that comes with a carry-on and a seat assignment will start at $30 more than a basic fare, while a ""premium"" bundle that offers those perks plus earlier boarding will be $50 more than the basic fare.', 'For at least $100 more than a basic fare, ""business"" bundle travelers will also be able to check two bags and get a seat at the front of the plane with more room.', 'Last month, the U.S. Department of Transportation issued a final rule that requires airlines to tell customers about fees, including those for checked or carry-on baggage, up front, a change the DOT said would save travelers more than half a billion dollars a year.', ""Frontier currently charges up to $99 to change flights if the change is made within a week of the trip, according to the airline's website."", 'Larger rivals Delta, American and United scrapped change fees during the Covid-19 pandemic for travelers who were booked in standard economy class and above.', 'Southwest Airlines does not charge customers to change their tickets.', '""The truth is the big four [U.S. airlines] all have no change fees on the majority of their products, so we were not as desirable,"" Biffle said.', 'He said change fees were a ""top complaint"" of travelers.', 'Travelers who buy the cheapest option on Frontier will still have to pay to change their flights.', 'Frontier also said flight credits would be valid for 12 months, up from three months, starting with tickets issued on Friday, and that it will reintroduce live phone support for travelers flying within 24 hours or to elite members of its frequent flyer program.']",0.0549664497380016,"Frontier also said flight credits would be valid for 12 months, up from three months, starting with tickets issued on Friday, and that it will reintroduce live phone support for travelers flying within 24 hours or to elite members of its frequent flyer program.","""The change is part of an overhaul announced on Friday of the budget airline's longtime pricing model, which brings customers in the door with eye-catching low base fares but charges a fee for everything else such as seating assignments and carry-on baggage.",0.3490889271100362,"Frontier also said flight credits would be valid for 12 months, up from three months, starting with tickets issued on Friday, and that it will reintroduce live phone support for travelers flying within 24 hours or to elite members of its frequent flyer program.","""The truth is the big four [U.S. airlines] all have no change fees on the majority of their products, so we were not as desirable,"" Biffle said.",2024-05-19 "At 81, Paul McCartney is worth £1 billion for the first time",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/media/at-81-paul-mccartney-is-worth-1-billion-for-the-first-time/index.html," Published 1:02 PM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","Baby He’s a Rich Man. Paul McCartney has added another feather in his cap as the United Kingdom’s first billionaire musician, the Sunday Times reported in the 2024 edition of its annual Rich List, published Friday. According to the Times, the 81-year-old Beatles alum and his wife Nancy are worth £1 billion ($1.3 billion), up from £950 million ($1.2 billion) in 2023. The newspaper attributed the milestone to McCartney’s longevity and continued appeal with fans across generational lines. Oh, and Beyoncé. Beyoncé earlier this year released her hit album “Cowboy Carter,” in which she reimagined the Beatles’ 1968 song “Blackbird,” originally written by McCartney. The pop icon made history as the first Black woman to come in at No. 1 on the Top Country Albums, according to Billboard, and McCartney praised the cover. McCartney has released some music of his own over the past year: Last November, the Beatles released the chart-topping “Now and Then,” advertised as the group’s final song. Splicing together John Lennon’s vocals from a 1977 demo recording, George Harrison’s guitar playing, as well as McCartney and Ringo Starr’s recently-recorded parts, “Now and Then” debuted at No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100, marking the group’s 35th Top 10 hit. The McCartneys’ net worth has been steadily climbing for the past six years, according to data from the Times, rising from about £750 million in 2018. In 2022, McCartney headlined at Glastonbury, England’s biggest music festival. It was his first time headlining the festival since 2004. In June, the live studio album “One Hand Clapping,” is due to be released for the first time since it was initially recorded by McCartney’s band Wings in 1974. McCartney famously sang that he doesn’t care too much for money, but the new album’s release is expected to give the rock star’s net worth another boost.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['Baby He’s a Rich Man.', 'Paul McCartney has added another feather in his cap as the United Kingdom’s first billionaire musician, the Sunday Times reported in the 2024 edition of its annual Rich List, published Friday.', 'According to the Times, the 81-year-old Beatles alum and his wife Nancy are worth £1 billion ($1.3 billion), up from £950 million ($1.2 billion) in 2023.', 'The newspaper attributed the milestone to McCartney’s longevity and continued appeal with fans across generational lines.', 'Oh, and Beyoncé.', 'Beyoncé earlier this year released her hit album “Cowboy Carter,” in which she reimagined the Beatles’ 1968 song “Blackbird,” originally written by McCartney.', 'The pop icon made history as the first Black woman to come in at No.', '1 on the Top Country Albums, according to Billboard, and McCartney praised the cover.', 'McCartney has released some music of his own over the past year: Last November, the Beatles released the chart-topping “Now and Then,” advertised as the group’s final song.', 'Splicing together John Lennon’s vocals from a 1977 demo recording, George Harrison’s guitar playing, as well as McCartney and Ringo Starr’s recently-recorded parts, “Now and Then” debuted at No.', '7 on the Billboard Hot 100, marking the group’s 35th Top 10 hit.', 'The McCartneys’ net worth has been steadily climbing for the past six years, according to data from the Times, rising from about £750 million in 2018.', 'In 2022, McCartney headlined at Glastonbury, England’s biggest music festival.', 'It was his first time headlining the festival since 2004.', 'In June, the live studio album “One Hand Clapping,” is due to be released for the first time since it was initially recorded by McCartney’s band Wings in 1974.', 'McCartney famously sang that he doesn’t care too much for money, but the new album’s release is expected to give the rock star’s net worth another boost.']",0.2955981436299091,"McCartney famously sang that he doesn’t care too much for money, but the new album’s release is expected to give the rock star’s net worth another boost.",The pop icon made history as the first Black woman to come in at No.,0.9977481245994568,"The McCartneys’ net worth has been steadily climbing for the past six years, according to data from the Times, rising from about £750 million in 2018.",,2024-05-19 AMC's meme stock windfall may help it pay down a massive debt load,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/14/amc-news-roaring-kitty-meme-stock-rally-may-help-with-debt-payments.html,2024-05-14T20:21:15+0000,"In this articleCan AMC Entertainment capitalize on a second meme craze?The stock, alongside GameStop, surged this week after ""Roaring Kitty,"" the man who inspired the massive short squeeze of 2021, posted online for the first time in nearly three years. The return of Roaring Kitty, whose legal name is Keith Gill, has led AMC shares to more than double since Friday's close. They rose above $6 in afternoon trading Tuesday.The last time these retail investors rallied around AMC and its stock surged, the movie theater chain was able to avoid bankruptcy. Now, it has a chance to put a dent in its substantial debt load.CEO Adam Aron made three major acquisitions ""in a relatively short amount of time"" after taking over the company in 2015, which included theater chains Carmike, Odeon and Nordic, said Eric Handler, managing director at Roth MKM. AMC spent about $3 billion on the deals collectively.While the acquisitions bolstered the size AMC's theater network, they also levered the company's balance sheet, Handler said.""So, when the pandemic hit, they sort of got a double whammy because they were already highly levered and then they had to raise more debt to survive and give them more cash,"" Handler said.Since the beginning of 2022, AMC has paid down nearly $1 billion of its debt, but about $4.6 billion remains.AMC has around $20 million due in 2024 and $118 million due in 2025, which is ""not a hurdle,"" according to Wedbush analyst Alicia Reese. But the looming $2.96 billion set for collection in 2026 requires the most attention.""I think they'll be able to renegotiate a portion of it, but a lot of it's probably just going to get extended maturities,"" Reese told CNBC.Lenders have been willing to renegotiate terms, but a bump in share price could allow AMC to secure better deals.Currently, AMC is paying about $100 million every quarter in interest expenses, which is eating into its potential profits. With the box office still recovering from pandemic- and strike-related production shutdowns, AMC has not been able to absorb its fixed expenses, such as rent, employee payroll and other operational costs, said Eric Wold, senior analyst at B. Riley Securities.""What to me matters is whether or not, like they did a few years ago, is can you take advantage of this to bolster their balance sheet?"" he said.AMC raised $250 million of new equity capital in a sale that wrapped up Monday, just as the meme stock craze was revived. The cinema chain sold 72.5 million shares in an at-the-market equity offering that started in late March. AMC sold the stock at an average price of $3.45 per share before commissions and fees. The majority of stock was sold prior to the stock price jump.""The recent surge in the stock presents an additional opportunity to raise equity funds that can support liquidity and debt reduction, eventually moving AMC to a structure that could facilitate institutional support,"" James Goss, analyst at Barrington Research, wrote in a note to investors on Tuesday.",CNBC,14/05/2024,"['In this articleCan AMC Entertainment capitalize on a second meme craze?The stock, alongside GameStop, surged this week after ""Roaring Kitty,"" the man who inspired the massive short squeeze of 2021, posted online for the first time in nearly three years.', ""The return of Roaring Kitty, whose legal name is Keith Gill, has led AMC shares to more than double since Friday's close."", 'They rose above $6 in afternoon trading Tuesday.', 'The last time these retail investors rallied around AMC and its stock surged, the movie theater chain was able to avoid bankruptcy.', 'Now, it has a chance to put a dent in its substantial debt load.', 'CEO Adam Aron made three major acquisitions ""in a relatively short amount of time"" after taking over the company in 2015, which included theater chains Carmike, Odeon and Nordic, said Eric Handler, managing director at Roth MKM.', 'AMC spent about $3 billion on the deals collectively.', ""While the acquisitions bolstered the size AMC's theater network, they also levered the company's balance sheet, Handler said."", '""So, when the pandemic hit, they sort of got a double whammy because they were already highly levered and then they had to raise more debt to survive and give them more cash,"" Handler said.', 'Since the beginning of 2022, AMC has paid down nearly $1 billion of its debt, but about $4.6 billion remains.', 'AMC has around $20 million due in 2024 and $118 million due in 2025, which is ""not a hurdle,"" according to Wedbush analyst Alicia Reese.', 'But the looming $2.96 billion set for collection in 2026 requires the most attention.', '""I think they\'ll be able to renegotiate a portion of it, but a lot of it\'s probably just going to get extended maturities,"" Reese told CNBC.Lenders have been willing to renegotiate terms, but a bump in share price could allow AMC to secure better deals.', 'Currently, AMC is paying about $100 million every quarter in interest expenses, which is eating into its potential profits.', 'With the box office still recovering from pandemic- and strike-related production shutdowns, AMC has not been able to absorb its fixed expenses, such as rent, employee payroll and other operational costs, said Eric Wold, senior analystatB. Riley Securities.', '""What to me matters is whether or not, like they did a few years ago, is can you take advantage of this to bolster their balance sheet?""', 'he said.', 'AMC raised $250 million of new equity capital in a sale that wrapped up Monday, just as the meme stock craze was revived.', 'The cinema chain sold 72.5 million shares in an at-the-market equity offering that started in late March.', 'AMC sold the stock at an average price of $3.45 per share before commissions and fees.', 'The majority of stock was sold prior to the stock price jump.', '""The recent surge in the stock presents an additional opportunity to raise equity funds that can support liquidity and debt reduction, eventually moving AMC to a structure that could facilitate institutional support,"" James Goss, analyst at Barrington Research, wrote in a note to investors on Tuesday.']",0.1371761173164336,"""I think they'll be able to renegotiate a portion of it, but a lot of it's probably just going to get extended maturities,"" Reese told CNBC.Lenders have been willing to renegotiate terms, but a bump in share price could allow AMC to secure better deals.","""So, when the pandemic hit, they sort of got a double whammy because they were already highly levered and then they had to raise more debt to survive and give them more cash,"" Handler said.",0.6805222172003526,"The return of Roaring Kitty, whose legal name is Keith Gill, has led AMC shares to more than double since Friday's close.","With the box office still recovering from pandemic- and strike-related production shutdowns, AMC has not been able to absorb its fixed expenses, such as rent, employee payroll and other operational costs, said Eric Wold, senior analystatB. Riley Securities.",2024-05-19 "Comcast offers subscribers Peacock, Netflix and Apple TV+ bundle",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/14/comcast-bundle-for-subscribers-peacock-netflix-and-apple-tv.html,2024-05-14T14:04:07+0000,"In this articleComcast said Tuesday it will introduce a streaming bundle for its cable, broadband and mobile subscribers, tying together Peacock, Netflix and Apple TV+ at a discounted rate.The announcement, made Tuesday at the MoffettNathanson media conference in New York, comes as major media players increasingly join forces to drive value for users and subscriptions for streaming services.On May 8, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery announced a bundle of its streaming services — Disney+, Hulu and Max.Comcast's offer follows a model similar to several bundles from Verizon: Its streaming bundle will be offered to existing Comcast subscribers, which could help prop up its pay-TV subscribers.The company lost 487,000 cable TV customers during the first quarter, Comcast reported during earnings on April 25. The company's wireless business, however, saw a 21% jump in customers to 6.9 million total lines.Comcast did not disclose the price of the upcoming bundle. Peacock subscription plans start at $5.99 per month, though that's increasing to $7.99 per month this summer. Comcast broadband customers typically receive a discount on the company's streaming service.Netflix plans start at $6.99 per month, and Apple TV+ costs $9.99 per month.""We've been bundling video successfully and creatively for 60 years,"" Comcast CEO Brian Roberts said Tuesday. ""And so this is the latest iteration of that. And I think this will be a pretty compelling package.""— CNBC's Kerry Caufield, Lillian Rizzo and Alex Sherman contributed to this report.Disclosure: Comcast owns NBCUniversal, the parent company of CNBC.",CNBC,14/05/2024,"['In this articleComcast said Tuesday it will introduce a streaming bundle for its cable, broadband and mobile subscribers, tying together Peacock, Netflix and Apple TV+ at a discounted rate.', 'The announcement, made Tuesday at the MoffettNathanson media conference in New York, comes as major media players increasingly join forces to drive value for users and subscriptions for streaming services.', 'On May 8, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery announced a bundle of its streaming services — Disney+, Hulu and Max.', ""Comcast's offer follows a model similar to several bundles from Verizon: Its streaming bundle will be offered to existing Comcast subscribers, which could help prop up its pay-TV subscribers."", 'The company lost 487,000 cable TV customers during the first quarter, Comcast reported during earnings on April 25.', ""The company's wireless business, however, saw a 21% jump in customers to 6.9 million total lines."", 'Comcast did not disclose the price of the upcoming bundle.', ""Peacock subscription plans start at $5.99 per month, though that's increasing to $7.99 per month this summer."", ""Comcast broadband customers typically receive a discount on the company's streaming service."", 'Netflix plans start at $6.99 per month, and Apple TV+ costs $9.99 per month.', '""We\'ve been bundling video successfully and creatively for 60 years,"" Comcast CEO Brian Roberts said Tuesday. ""', 'And so this is the latest iteration of that.', 'AndI think this will be a pretty compelling package.""—', ""CNBC's Kerry Caufield, Lillian Rizzo and Alex Sherman contributed to this report."", 'Disclosure: Comcast owns NBCUniversal, the parent company of CNBC.']",0.1283073022638161,"""We've been bundling video successfully and creatively for 60 years,"" Comcast CEO Brian Roberts said Tuesday. ""","The company lost 487,000 cable TV customers during the first quarter, Comcast reported during earnings on April 25.",0.644377127289772,"The company's wireless business, however, saw a 21% jump in customers to 6.9 million total lines.","The company lost 487,000 cable TV customers during the first quarter, Comcast reported during earnings on April 25.",2024-05-19 The NBA is picking its TV partners — and a deal hinges on Warner Bros. Discovery's next move,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/nba-tv-rights-deal-hinges-on-warner-bros-discovery.html,2024-05-16T23:14:28+0000,"In this articleWhether it's two people in a marriage or a company and a sports league, it's not easy to break up a 40-year partnership.The NBA and Warner Bros. Discovery's Turner Sports have been in business together for nearly four decades. The relationship is now in jeopardy, as Comcast's NBCUniversal is attempting to steal away its package of games with a $2.5 billion per-year offer, as CNBC has previously reported.The league ended its exclusive window to renew a deal with its two current media partners, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery, on April 22. Since then, the league has set a framework to renew with Disney, bring in Amazon as a new third partner, and sell its other package to either Warner Bros. Discovery or NBCUniversal, according to people familiar with the matter. The league stands to triple the total value of a new deal from about $24 billion to $76 billion or more.Warner Bros. Discovery continues to have discussions with the NBA about keeping the rights, according to people familiar with the matter. The league could still decide to simply renew with its incumbent partner, but it's not likely, said two of the people, who asked not to be named because the talks are private.The more probable path would be for the league to sign papers with NBCUniversal, formally securing its bid. That would trigger a contractual option for Warner Bros. Discovery to match the offer.This is where things might get thorny.Both the NBA and Warner Bros. Discovery have begun poring over legal language to determine if the league can reject a potential match, the people said. The contractual wording is vague, and it's unclear if the NBA has full discretion to walk away from Warner Bros. Discovery if it matches the bid, said the people.If Warner Bros. Discovery decides to match, and the NBA moves to choose NBCUniversal's offer, the sides may be headed for a lawsuit. Warner Bros. Discovery believes it's fairly well protected by the contractual language, one of the people said.Still, that remains hypothetical at this point. It's possible Warner Bros. Discovery won't match NBCUniversal's bid, which would avoid potential conflict.Some league officials are worried Warner Bros. Discovery's balance sheet can't handle spending $2.5 billion a year on the NBA, according to people familiar with the matter. Warner Bros. Discovery has a market valuation of about $20 billion and an enterprise value of about $60 billion, including $43.2 billion of gross debt, as of the end of the company's fiscal first quarter. The company had a leverage ratio (net debt to adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) of 4.1.Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav has both publicly and privately preached the importance of financial discipline for the company.NBCUniversal parent Comcast has a market capitalization of about $154 billion and an enterprise value of $244 billion. Comcast's leverage ratio is about 2.5.NBA officials are more comfortable Comcast can pay what would amount to more than double the previous price for the package, according to the people familiar to the matter. Warner Bros. Discovery had been paying $1.2 billion per year to air NBA games. The new package also includes fewer games than the current one because the NBA is likely to introduce a third partner — most likely to be Amazon.Spokespeople for Warner Bros. Discovery and the NBA declined to comment.Warner Bros. Discovery, Disney and Fox announced Thursday they plan to name their new sports streaming platform Venu, taking inspiration from where live sports are played. The new joint venture, one-third owned by each media company, will offer a bundle of sports networks and ESPN+ at a still to be determined price that's less expensive than traditional cable. CNBC reported earlier this year the price could be around $45 or $50 a month. The service will debut in the fall, the companies have said.The three companies haven't yet formally signed paperwork on the venture as they await regulatory approval. If Warner Bros. Discovery loses the NBA, that will diminish the value of the service for consumers, as NBCUniversal and Amazon aren't partners in the product.Warner Bros. Discovery licenses the rights to other sports leagues and groups, including MLB, the NHL and the National Collegiate Athletic Association's March Madness. The company will also have the NBA next year no matter what, as the new rights deal doesn't kick in until the end of the 2024-25 season.There's been no discussion about shutting down the venture before it launches if Warner Bros. Discovery loses the NBA, according to a person familiar with the matter. Still, without the NBA, Disney and Fox would be contributing the lion's share of sports content for the service. Disney's ESPN and Fox own both college football and NFL packages, unlike Warner Bros. Discovery. The three companies plan to split revenue commensurate with the affiliate fees associated with their linear networks.Warner Bros. Discovery could use the money it saves from not obtaining NBA rights to spend on other sports, such as more MLB games or bidding for UFC, which will likely begin renewal discussions with media companies in early 2025.ESPN plans to launch its own ""flagship"" streaming service in the fall of 2025.Disclosure: Comcast's NBCUniversal is the parent company of CNBC.WATCH: The root problem facing streamers is the lack of daily usage, says LightShed's Greenfield",CNBC,16/05/2024,"[""In this articleWhether it's two people in a marriage or a company and a sports league, it's not easy to break up a 40-year partnership."", ""The NBA and Warner Bros. Discovery's Turner Sports have been in business together for nearly four decades."", ""The relationship is now in jeopardy, as Comcast's NBCUniversal is attempting to steal away its package of games with a $2.5 billion per-year offer, as CNBC has previously reported."", 'The league ended its exclusive window to renew a deal with its two current media partners, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery, on April 22.', 'Since then, the league has set a framework to renew with Disney, bring in Amazon as a new third partner, and sell its other package to either Warner Bros. Discovery or NBCUniversal, according to people familiar with the matter.', 'The league stands to triple the total value of a new deal from about $24 billion to $76 billion or more.', 'Warner Bros. Discovery continues to have discussions with the NBA about keeping the rights, according to people familiar with the matter.', ""The league could still decide to simply renew with its incumbent partner, but it's not likely, said two of the people, who asked not to be named because the talks are private."", 'The more probable path would be for the league to sign papers with NBCUniversal, formally securing its bid.', 'That would trigger a contractual option for Warner Bros. Discovery to match the offer.', 'This is where things might get thorny.', 'Both the NBA and Warner Bros. Discovery have begun poring over legal language to determine if the league can reject a potential match, the people said.', ""The contractual wording is vague, and it's unclear if the NBA has full discretion to walk away from Warner Bros. Discovery if it matches the bid, said the people."", ""If Warner Bros. Discovery decides to match, and the NBA moves to choose NBCUniversal's offer, the sides may be headed for a lawsuit."", ""Warner Bros. Discovery believes it's fairly well protected by the contractual language, one of the people said."", 'Still, that remains hypothetical at this point.', ""It's possible Warner Bros. Discovery won't match NBCUniversal's bid, which would avoid potential conflict."", ""Some league officials are worried Warner Bros. Discovery's balance sheet can't handle spending $2.5 billion a year on the NBA, according to people familiar with the matter."", ""Warner Bros. Discovery has a market valuation of about $20 billion and an enterprise value of about $60 billion, including $43.2 billion of gross debt, as of the end of the company's fiscal first quarter."", 'The company had a leverage ratio (net debt to adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) of 4.1.Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav has both publicly and privately preached the importance of financial discipline for the company.', 'NBCUniversal parent Comcast has a market capitalization of about $154 billion and an enterprise value of $244 billion.', ""Comcast's leverage ratio is about 2.5.NBA officials are more comfortable Comcast can pay what would amount to more than double the previous price for the package,according to the people familiar to the matter."", 'Warner Bros. Discovery had been paying $1.2 billion per year to air NBA games.', 'The new package also includes fewer games than the current one because the NBA is likely to introduce a third partner — most likely to be Amazon.', 'Spokespeople for Warner Bros. Discovery and the NBA declined to comment.', 'Warner Bros. Discovery, Disney and Fox announced Thursday they plan to name their new sports streaming platform Venu, taking inspiration from where live sports are played.', ""The new joint venture, one-third owned by each media company, will offer a bundle of sports networks and ESPN+ at a still to be determined price that's less expensive than traditional cable."", 'CNBC reported earlier this year the price could be around $45 or $50 a month.', 'The service will debut in the fall, the companies have said.', ""The three companies haven't yet formally signed paperwork on the venture as they await regulatory approval."", ""If Warner Bros. Discovery loses the NBA, that will diminish the value of the service for consumers, as NBCUniversal and Amazon aren't partners in the product."", ""Warner Bros. Discovery licenses the rights to other sports leagues and groups, including MLB, the NHL and the National Collegiate Athletic Association's March Madness."", ""The company will also have the NBA next year no matter what, as the new rights deal doesn't kick in until the end of the 2024-25 season."", ""There's been no discussion about shutting down the venture before it launches if Warner Bros. Discovery loses the NBA, according to a person familiar with the matter."", ""Still, without the NBA, Disney and Fox would be contributing the lion's share of sports content for the service."", ""Disney's ESPN and Fox own both college football and NFL packages, unlike Warner Bros. Discovery."", 'The three companies plan to split revenue commensurate with the affiliate fees associated with their linear networks.', 'Warner Bros. Discovery could use the money it saves from not obtaining NBA rights to spend on other sports, such as more MLB games or bidding for UFC, which will likely begin renewal discussions with media companies in early 2025.ESPN plans to launch its own ""flagship"" streaming service in the fall of 2025.Disclosure: Comcast\'s NBCUniversal is the parent company of CNBC.WATCH: The root problem facing streamers is the lack of daily usage, says LightShed\'s Greenfield']",0.000679100756805,"Warner Bros. Discovery, Disney and Fox announced Thursday they plan to name their new sports streaming platform Venu, taking inspiration from where live sports are played.","The relationship is now in jeopardy, as Comcast's NBCUniversal is attempting to steal away its package of games with a $2.5 billion per-year offer, as CNBC has previously reported.",0.1325168354170663,"Comcast's leverage ratio is about 2.5.NBA officials are more comfortable Comcast can pay what would amount to more than double the previous price for the package,according to the people familiar to the matter.","If Warner Bros. Discovery loses the NBA, that will diminish the value of the service for consumers, as NBCUniversal and Amazon aren't partners in the product.",2024-05-19 Boeing shareholders vote to approve $33 million CEO pay package,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/investing/boeing-shareholders-vote-to-approve-usd33-million-ceo-pay-package/index.html," Updated 12:32 PM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","Shareholders of embattled airplane maker Boeing approved a pay package of nearly $33 million for outgoing CEO Dave Calhoun at the company’s annual general meeting on Friday. That’s the highest package ever paid to the company’s CEO and a 45% increase from the $22.6 million he received for 2022. The vast majority of the bump comes from a giant stock bonus granted on top of his more-than-a-million-dollar salary. Calhoun, who has led Boeing since 2020, announced in March that he will leave the company by the end of the year. The shareholder vote on Friday was made to approve Calhoun’s 2023 pay package. Calhoun has said he declined to accept an additional annual incentive bonus of $2,800,000 for the year – a request the board said he made after the Alaska Airlines incident. Upon his retirement, Calhoun is set to take home another going-away present: a $45 million mix of stock awards and options that vest over time. The approval comes as the plane maker is facing additional scrutiny for a series of safety incidents, including a mid-air blowout of part of a fuselage in January, which prompted a number of investigations into the company’s practices, an executive shakeup and promises that the company will turn itself around. Boeing has been struggling financially for five years, since fatal crashes of its 737 Max in late 2018 and early 2019 resulted in a 20-month grounding of its best-selling plane. It was also hit by the pandemic, which caused a near-halt in air travel for months and deep losses at most airlines that buy its planes. “Our compensation program is designed to align leadership pay with the long term performance of our business,” said Steve Mollenkopf, Boeing’s new chairman, when asked how the company can justify such a high compensation package given recent safety grievances. “It’s really driven by meeting our commitments to the highest safety and quality standards.” Since the start of the grounding in 2019 the company has reported adjusted losses totaling more than $31 billion, and losses are projected to continue going forward. “The board is confident that the current compensation structure continues to directly align with performance and balances both the meaningful progress made to restore operational and financial strength along with the fact that certain performance criteria has not been met,” he said. The compensation committee “took swift action to make significant design changes to our compensation plan in 2024” after the Alaska Airlines incident in January, Mollenkopf said. The annual incentive metric now gives greater weight to operational metrics, like safety and quality. Shares of Boeing (BA) were down 0.1% in afternoon trading. This story is developing and will be updated.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['Shareholders of embattled airplane maker Boeing approved a pay package of nearly $33 million for outgoing CEO Dave Calhoun at the company’s annual general meeting on Friday.', 'That’s the highest package ever paid to the company’s CEO and a 45% increase from the $22.6 million he received for 2022.', 'The vast majority of the bump comes from a giant stock bonus granted on top of his more-than-a-million-dollar salary.', 'Calhoun, who has led Boeing since 2020, announced in March thathe will leave the company by the end of the year.', 'The shareholder vote on Friday was made to approve Calhoun’s 2023 pay package.', 'Calhoun has said he declined to accept an additional annual incentive bonus of $2,800,000 for the year – a request the board said he made after the Alaska Airlines incident.', 'Upon his retirement, Calhoun is set to take home another going-away present: a $45 million mix of stock awards and options that vest over time.', 'The approval comes as the plane maker is facing additional scrutiny for a series of safety incidents,including a mid-air blowout of part of a fuselage in January, which prompted a number of investigations into the company’s practices, an executive shakeup and promises that the company will turn itself around.', 'Boeing has been struggling financially for five years, since fatal crashes of its 737 Max in late 2018 and early 2019 resulted in a 20-month grounding of its best-selling plane.', 'It was also hit by the pandemic, which caused a near-halt in air travel for months and deep losses at most airlines that buy its planes.', '“Our compensation program is designed to align leadership pay with the long term performance of our business,” said Steve Mollenkopf, Boeing’s new chairman, when asked how the company can justify such a high compensation package given recent safety grievances. “', 'It’s really driven by meeting our commitments to the highest safety and quality standards.”', 'Since the start of the grounding in 2019 the company has reported adjusted losses totaling more than $31 billion, and losses are projected to continue going forward.', '“The board is confident that the current compensation structure continues to directly align with performance and balances both the meaningful progress made to restore operational and financial strength along with the fact that certain performance criteria has not been met,” he said.', 'The compensation committee “took swift action to make significant design changes to our compensation plan in 2024” after the Alaska Airlines incident in January, Mollenkopf said.', 'The annual incentive metric now gives greater weight to operational metrics, like safety and quality.', 'Shares of Boeing (BA) were down 0.1% in afternoon trading.', 'This story is developing and will be updated.']",0.2865120397463906,"“The board is confident that the current compensation structure continues to directly align with performance and balances both the meaningful progress made to restore operational and financial strength along with the fact that certain performance criteria has not been met,” he said.","Since the start of the grounding in 2019 the company has reported adjusted losses totaling more than $31 billion, and losses are projected to continue going forward.",0.1641185760498046,That’s the highest package ever paid to the company’s CEO and a 45% increase from the $22.6 million he received for 2022.,"It was also hit by the pandemic, which caused a near-halt in air travel for months and deep losses at most airlines that buy its planes.",2024-05-19 More OpenAI drama: Exec quits over concerns about focus on profit over safety,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/tech/openai-exec-exits-safety-concerns/index.html," Published 4:07 PM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","A departing OpenAI executive focused on safety is raising concerns about the company on his way out the door. Jan Leike, who resigned from his role leading the company’s “superalignment” team this week, said in a thread on X Friday that he disagreed with OpenAI leadership’s “core priorities” and had “reached a breaking point.” “Alignment” or “superalignment” are terms used in the artificial intelligence space to refer to work on training AI systems to operate within human needs and priorities. Leike joined OpenAI in 2021, and last summer the company announced he would co-lead the superalignment team focused on “scientific and technical breakthroughs to steer and control AI systems much smarter than us.” However, Leike said Friday that in recent months the team has been under-resourced and “sailing against the wind.” “Sometimes we were struggling for compute and it was getting harder and harder to get this crucial research done,” he said on X, adding that Thursday was his last day at the startup. “Building smarter-than-human machines is an inherently dangerous endeavor … But over the past years, safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products.” OpenAI CEO Sam Altman responded to Leike’s post saying the company is committed to AI safety. “(I)’m super appreciative of @janleike’s contributions to openai’s alignment research and safety culture, and very sad to see him leave,” Altman said on X. “(H)e’s right we have a lot more to do; we are committed to doing it. (I)’ll have a longer post in the next couple of days.” Leike’s exit, which he announced Wednesday, comes amid a broader leadership shuffle at OpenAI. His resignation followed an announcement on Tuesday by OpenAI co-founder and chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, who also helped lead the superalignment team, that he would leave the company. Sutskever said he was leaving to work on a “project that is very personally meaningful to me.” But his exit was notable given the central role he played in the dramatic firing — and return — of Altman last year, when he voted to remove Altman as chief executive and chairman of the board. CNN contributor Kara Swisher previously reported that Sutskever had been concerned that Altman was pushing AI technology “too far, too fast.” But days after Altman’s ouster, Sutskever had a change of heart: He signed an employee letter calling for the entire board to resign and for Altman to return. Still, questions about how — and how quickly — to develop and publicly release AI technology may have continued to cause tension within the company in the months after Altman regained control of the firm. The executive exits come after OpenAI announced this week that it would make its most powerful AI model yet, GPT-4o, available for free to the public through ChatGPT. The technology will make ChatGPT more like a digital personal assistant, capable of real-time spoken conversations. “I believe much more of our bandwidth should be spent getting ready for the next generations of models, on security, monitoring, preparedness, safety, adversarial robustness, (super)alignment, confidentiality, societal impact, and related topics,” Leike wrote in his X thread on Friday. “These problems are quite hard to get right, and I am concerned we aren’t on a trajectory to get there.” In the wake of Sutskever and Leike’s exits, OpenAI confirmed to CNN that in recent weeks it had begun to dissolve its superalignment team, and instead was integrating members of the team across its various research groups. A spokesperson for the company said that structure would help OpenAI better achieve its superalignment objectives. CNN’s Samantha Delouya contributed to this report.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['A departing OpenAI executive focused on safety is raising concerns about the company on his way out the door.', 'Jan Leike, who resigned from his role leading the company’s “superalignment” team this week, said in a thread on X Friday that he disagreed with OpenAI leadership’s “core priorities” and had “reached a breaking point.”', '“Alignment” or “superalignment” are terms used in the artificial intelligence space to refer to work on training AI systems to operate within human needs and priorities.', 'Leike joined OpenAI in 2021, and last summer the company announced he would co-lead the superalignment team focused on “scientific and technical breakthroughs to steer and control AI systems much smarter than us.”', 'However, Leike said Friday that in recent months the team has been under-resourced and “sailing against the wind.”', '“Sometimes we were struggling for compute and it was getting harder and harder to get this crucial research done,” he said on X, adding that Thursday was his last day at the startup. “', 'Building smarter-than-human machines is an inherently dangerous endeavor … But over the past years, safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products.”', 'OpenAI CEO Sam Altman responded to Leike’s post saying the company is committed to AI safety.', '“(I)’m super appreciative of @janleike’s contributions to openai’s alignment research and safety culture, and very sad to see him leave,” Altman said on X. “(H)e’s right we have a lot more to do; we are committed to doing it. (', 'I)’ll have a longer post in the next couple of days.”', 'Leike’s exit, which he announced Wednesday, comes amid a broader leadership shuffle at OpenAI.', 'His resignation followed an announcement on Tuesday by OpenAI co-founder and chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, who also helped lead the superalignment team, that he would leave the company.', 'Sutskever said he was leaving to work on a “project that is very personally meaningful to me.”', 'But his exit was notable given the central role he played in the dramatic firing — and return — of Altman last year, when he voted to remove Altman as chief executive and chairman of the board.', 'CNN contributor Kara Swisherpreviously reported that Sutskever had been concerned that Altman was pushing AI technology “too far, too fast.”', 'But days after Altman’s ouster, Sutskever had a change of heart: He signed an employee letter calling for the entire board to resign and for Altman to return.', 'Still, questions about how — and how quickly — to develop and publicly release AI technology may have continued to cause tension within the company in the months after Altman regained control of the firm.', 'The executive exits come after OpenAI announced this week that it would make its most powerful AI model yet, GPT-4o, available for free to the public through ChatGPT.', 'The technology will make ChatGPT more like a digital personal assistant, capable of real-time spoken conversations.', '“I believe much more of our bandwidth should be spent getting ready for the next generations of models, on security, monitoring, preparedness, safety, adversarial robustness, (super)alignment, confidentiality, societal impact, and related topics,” Leike wrote in his X thread on Friday. “', 'These problems are quite hard to get right, and I am concerned we aren’t on a trajectory to get there.”', 'In the wake of Sutskever and Leike’s exits, OpenAI confirmed to CNN that in recent weeks it had begun to dissolve its superalignment team, and instead was integrating members of the team across its various research groups.', 'A spokesperson for the company said that structure would help OpenAI better achieve its superalignment objectives.', 'CNN’s Samantha Delouya contributed to this report.']",0.1831292947028988,"“(I)’m super appreciative of @janleike’s contributions to openai’s alignment research and safety culture, and very sad to see him leave,” Altman said on X. “(H)e’s right we have a lot more to do; we are committed to doing it. (","These problems are quite hard to get right, and I am concerned we aren’t on a trajectory to get there.”",-0.5513206919034322,A spokesperson for the company said that structure would help OpenAI better achieve its superalignment objectives.,"However, Leike said Friday that in recent months the team has been under-resourced and “sailing against the wind.”",2024-05-19 Walmart says more diners are buying its groceries as fast food gets pricey,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/walmart-earnings-grocery-sales-rise-as-fast-food-prices-increases.html,2024-05-16T17:51:10+0000,"In this articleForget the drive-thru. Walmart wants diners to find a value meal in its grocery aisles.As fast food gets pricier, the nation's largest grocer sees a sales opportunity.On a call with CNBC on Thursday, Walmart Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey said some of the discounter's sales growth in the recent quarter came from customers who turned to its grocery aisles for cheaper meals than they can get at quick-service restaurants.""It's roughly 4.3 times more expensive to eat out than it is to eat at home,"" he said. ""And that's benefiting our business.""As customers see some grocery items stay the same price or even become cheaper, the gap between buying menu items and cooking food at home has grown even wider, he said.Walmart's stock soared to an all-time high Thursday, after it beat Wall Street's quarterly sales and revenue expectations and said it expected its full-year results to be on the high end of, or better than, its previous forecast. Transactions in the U.S. rose 3.8%, as more customers visited its stores and website.Walmart's strong store traffic and quarterly results are at odds with those of restaurant companies, including McDonald's, Starbucks and Yum Brands. Foot traffic to limited-service chains, which includes fast-food and fast-casual restaurants, fell 3.5% in the first quarter, according to Revenue Management Solutions. Restaurant executives blamed bad weather in January and February — and a consumer slowdown, particularly among lower-income diners.Like many restaurants, McDonald's has faced backlash to its prices. An $18 Big Mac combo sold at one of its franchised restaurants in Connecticut went viral on social media, prompting executives to defend the chain's pricing on its conference call. The burger giant reported disappointing U.S. same-store sales growth of 2.5%, suggesting that its foot traffic fell during the quarter.Still, McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinski said consumers, particularly those earning lower incomes, are hunting for deals. The chain will offer a $5 value meal starting June 25 for roughly a month.Not all restaurants have had trouble getting diners to pay higher prices: fast-casual chains such as Chipotle, Wingstop and Sweetgreen all reported strong sales in their most recent quarters.Inflation data from the U.S. Labor Department reflects the difference between the price that customers pay for food they cook at home or pack for lunch, compared with what they pay at a coffee shop or restaurant. As of April, the price of food at home, a category that measures the total cost of food purchased at grocers or other food stores, was up 1.1% year over year. The price of food away from home rose significantly more: 4.1% year over year.On the company's earnings call Thursday, Walmart U.S. CEO John Furner pointed to a newer tool in Walmart's arsenal that it can use to compete more aggressively with restaurants: its new grocery brand, Bettergoods.The premium line includes unique flavors and merchandise tailored for more health-conscious customers or ones with a special diet, such as gluten-free or plant-based items. For example, it includes strawberries and cream-flavored Greek yogurt, curry chicken empanadas, restaurant-style chicken wings and salted caramel oat milk ice cream.Seventy percent of the brand's items are under $5, Furner said — a price point that may catch the eye of shoppers ""trying to feed a family of four, five, [or] six.""— CNBC's Amelia Lucas contributed to this report.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"['In this articleForget the drive-thru.', 'Walmart wants diners to find a value meal in its grocery aisles.', ""As fast food gets pricier, the nation's largest grocer sees a sales opportunity."", ""On a call with CNBC on Thursday, Walmart Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey said some of the discounter's sales growth in the recent quarter came from customers who turned to its grocery aisles for cheaper meals than they can get at quick-service restaurants."", '""It\'s roughly 4.3 times more expensive to eat out than it is to eat at home,"" he said. ""', ""And that's benefiting our business."", '""As customers see some grocery items stay the same price or even become cheaper, the gap between buying menu items and cooking food at home has grown even wider, he said.', ""Walmart's stock soared to an all-time high Thursday, after it beat Wall Street's quarterly sales and revenue expectations and said it expected its full-year results to be on the high end of, or better than, its previous forecast."", 'Transactions in the U.S. rose 3.8%, as more customers visited its stores and website.', ""Walmart's strong store traffic and quarterly results are at odds with those of restaurant companies, including McDonald's, Starbucks and Yum Brands."", 'Foot traffic to limited-service chains, which includes fast-food and fast-casual restaurants, fell 3.5% in the first quarter, according to Revenue Management Solutions.', 'Restaurant executives blamed bad weather in January and February — and a consumer slowdown, particularly among lower-income diners.', ""Like many restaurants, McDonald's has faced backlash to its prices."", ""An $18 Big Mac combo sold at one of its franchised restaurants in Connecticut went viral on social media, prompting executives to defend the chain's pricing on its conference call."", 'The burger giant reported disappointing U.S. same-store sales growth of 2.5%, suggesting that its foot traffic fell during the quarter.', ""Still, McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinski said consumers, particularly those earning lower incomes, are hunting for deals."", 'The chain will offer a $5 value meal starting June 25 for roughly a month.', 'Not all restaurants have had trouble getting diners to pay higher prices: fast-casual chains such as Chipotle, Wingstop and Sweetgreen all reported strong sales in their most recent quarters.', 'Inflation data from the U.S. Labor Departmentreflects the differencebetween the price that customers pay for food they cook at home or pack for lunch, compared with what they pay at a coffee shop or restaurant.', 'As of April, the price of food at home, a category that measures the total cost of food purchased at grocers or other food stores, was up 1.1% year over year.', 'The price of food away from home rose significantly more: 4.1% year over year.', ""On the company's earnings call Thursday, Walmart U.S. CEO John Furner pointed to a newer tool in Walmart's arsenal that it can use to compete more aggressively with restaurants: its new grocery brand, Bettergoods."", 'The premium line includes unique flavors and merchandise tailored for more health-conscious customers or ones with a special diet, such as gluten-free or plant-based items.', 'For example, it includes strawberries and cream-flavored Greek yogurt, curry chicken empanadas, restaurant-style chicken wings and salted caramel oat milk ice cream.', 'Seventy percent of the brand\'s items are under $5, Furner said — a price point that may catch the eye of shoppers ""trying to feed a family of four, five, [or] six.""—', ""CNBC's Amelia Lucas contributed to this report.""]",0.0763173193155215,"The premium line includes unique flavors and merchandise tailored for more health-conscious customers or ones with a special diet, such as gluten-free or plant-based items.","Restaurant executives blamed bad weather in January and February — and a consumer slowdown, particularly among lower-income diners.",0.3580176420509815,"Transactions in the U.S. rose 3.8%, as more customers visited its stores and website.","Foot traffic to limited-service chains, which includes fast-food and fast-casual restaurants, fell 3.5% in the first quarter, according to Revenue Management Solutions.",2024-05-19 FDA approves Amgen's treatment for most deadly form of lung cancer,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/fda-approves-amgen-small-cell-lung-cancer-treatment.html,2024-05-16T21:47:17+0000,"In this articleThe Food and Drug Administration on Thursday approved Amgen's therapy for patients with the most deadly form of lung cancer. The agency cleared the drug, which will be marketed under the name Imdelltra, as a second or later line of treatment for people with advanced small-cell lung cancer. That means patients can take the drug if their cancer progresses while on or after trying one other form of treatment, which is typically a type of chemotherapy. Amgen's drug is also known by its generic name tarlatamab.In clinical trials, Amgen's drug has been shown to reduce tumor growth and help people with small-cell lung cancer live significantly longer.Of the more than 2.2 million patients who are diagnosed with lung cancer worldwide each year, small-cell lung cancer comprises 15%, or 330,000, of those cases, Amgen said. Around 80% to 85% of people with small-cell lung cancer are diagnosed with an advanced stage of the disease, according to a study published in the Journal of Cancer.There are around 35,000 patients with small-cell lung cancer in the U.S., Dr. Jay Bradner, Amgen's chief scientific officer, told CNBC. Small-cell lung cancer usually starts in the airways of the lung and grows rapidly, creating large tumors and spreading throughout the body. Symptoms include bloody phlegm, cough, chest pain and shortness of breath.Only 3% of patients with small-cell lung cancer that has spread to other parts of the body live past 5 years, according to the American Cancer Society. That five-year survival rate accounts for 7% among all patients with the condition, regardless of whether the cancer spreads. Bradner said patients with small-cell lung cancer typically have four to five months to live.Lynne Bell, a small-cell lung cancer patient from Atlanta, Georgia, is an exception. She says she was ""horrified"" and ""in a dark place"" after she was diagnosed with an advanced stage of the condition in 2021.But she started taking Amgen's Imdelltra in an ongoing clinical trial in September after other treatments, including chemotherapy, stopped working. Since then, Bell said her tumors have shrunk significantly and cancer scans ""look great."" She said she specifically noticed her pain go away after taking a second dose of Amgen's drug.When asked how long she would continue Imdelltra, Bell said, ""If this medication is working and I'm not having any side effects, I'm good to go. I'm in it to win it.""Maida Mangiameli, a small-cell lung cancer advocate and patient mentor from Naperville, Illinois, is also a survivor of the devastating disease. She was diagnosed with an advanced stage of the condition in 2018 but was deemed in remission this year, meaning the treatment she received has reduced the signs and symptoms of the cancer. Mangiameli has been in remission for five years. Her treatments included chemotherapy and 28 days of radiation therapy. She told CNBC that Amgen's Imdelltra may ""not be something for me, but it might be down the road."" Mangiameli added that she's excited to know that there will be another therapy option for other patients suffering from small-cell lung cancer. She said the development of new treatments for the disease has been ""on the back burner"" for several years. Amgen's Bradner also said treatment options ""are pretty meager."" ""It's just one of the most dreadful cancers and so we needed a new solution,"" he said. Amgen's drug is called a bispecific T-cell engager, which is designed to redirect the immune system's T-cells to recognize and kill cancer cells. The approval is based on results from a phase two trial that followed more than 200 patients with small-cell lung cancer. Cancer tumors shrank in 40% of people who were given a 10-milligram dose of Imdelltra every 2 weeks.Notably, the median time that people lived after starting 10-milligram doses of Amgen's drug was 14.3 months. That compares with around six to 12 months with current treatments, according to the National Cancer Institute. ""These patients who would normally only have four to five months enjoy almost another full year of life,"" Bradner told CNBC. That time can make a huge difference for patients. For Mangiameli, receiving treatment for small-cell lung cancer gave her years to get closer to her grandchild, who was born not long before she was diagnosed with the disease. ""I had the impetus, the drive to make sure I survived. … I just had my first grandchild, I have to live long enough for us to become pals,"" Mangiameli said. Meanwhile, Bell said taking Imdelltra gave her the time to travel; she went on a trip with her daughter to San Diego.""I'm trying to go as many places that I can get to,"" Bell told CNBC.Amgen is continuing to study Imdelltra in several trials, including some that will test the drug as an earlier line of treatment for small-cell lung cancer. That includes a late-stage trial comparing Imdelltra with chemotherapy as a second-line treatment for the disease. Amgen also plans to start another phase three study on the drug as a first-line treatment for patients at an advanced stage of small-cell lung cancer. ""What makes us hopeful is, as you develop cancer medicines, that if they work in later stages of the disease, they can work even better when you move them"" to first-line treatment, Bradner said.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"[""In this articleThe Food and Drug Administration on Thursday approved Amgen's therapy for patients with the most deadly form of lung cancer."", 'The agency cleared the drug, which will be marketed under the name Imdelltra, as a second or later line of treatment for people with advanced small-cell lung cancer.', 'That means patients can take the drug if their cancer progresses while on or after trying one other form of treatment, which is typically a type of chemotherapy.', ""Amgen's drug is also known by its generic name tarlatamab."", ""In clinical trials, Amgen's drug has been shown to reduce tumor growth and help people with small-cell lung cancer live significantly longer."", 'Of the more than 2.2 million patients who are diagnosed with lung cancer worldwide each year, small-cell lung cancer comprises 15%, or 330,000, of those cases, Amgen said.', 'Around 80% to 85% of people with small-cell lung cancer are diagnosed with an advanced stage of the disease, according to a study published in the Journal of Cancer.', ""There are around 35,000 patients with small-cell lung cancer in the U.S., Dr. Jay Bradner, Amgen's chief scientific officer, told CNBC.Small-cell lung cancer usually starts in the airways of the lung and grows rapidly, creating large tumors and spreading throughout the body."", 'Symptoms include bloody phlegm, cough, chest pain and shortness of breath.', 'Only 3% of patients with small-cell lung cancer that has spread to other parts of the body live past 5 years, according to the American Cancer Society.', 'That five-year survival rate accounts for 7% among all patients with the condition, regardless of whether the cancer spreads.', 'Bradner said patients with small-cell lung cancer typically have four to five months to live.', 'Lynne Bell, a small-cell lung cancer patient from Atlanta, Georgia, is an exception.', 'She says she was ""horrified"" and ""in a dark place"" after she was diagnosed with an advanced stage of the condition in 2021.But she started taking Amgen\'s Imdelltra in an ongoing clinical trial in September after other treatments, including chemotherapy, stopped working.', 'Since then, Bell said her tumors have shrunk significantly and cancer scans ""look great.""', ""She said she specifically noticed her pain go away after taking a second dose of Amgen's drug."", 'When asked how long she would continue Imdelltra, Bell said, ""If this medication is working and I\'m not having any side effects, I\'m good to go.', ""I'm in it to win it."", '""Maida Mangiameli, a small-cell lung cancer advocate and patient mentor from Naperville, Illinois, is also a survivor of the devastating disease.', 'She was diagnosed with an advanced stage of the condition in 2018 but was deemed in remission this year, meaning the treatment she received has reduced the signs and symptoms of the cancer.', 'Mangiameli has been in remission for five years.', 'Her treatments included chemotherapy and 28 days of radiation therapy.', 'She told CNBC that Amgen\'s Imdelltra may ""not be something for me, but it might be down the road.', '""Mangiameli added that she\'s excited to know that there will be another therapy option for other patients suffering from small-cell lung cancer.', 'She said the development of new treatments for the disease has been ""on the back burner"" for several years.', 'Amgen\'s Bradner also said treatment options ""are pretty meager.', '""""It\'s just one of the most dreadful cancers and so we needed a new solution,"" he said.', ""Amgen's drug is called a bispecific T-cell engager, which is designed to redirect the immune system's T-cells to recognize and kill cancer cells."", 'The approval is based on results from a phase two trial that followed more than 200 patients with small-cell lung cancer.', 'Cancer tumors shrank in 40% of people who were given a 10-milligram dose of Imdelltra every 2 weeks.', ""Notably, the median time that people lived after starting 10-milligram doses of Amgen's drug was 14.3 months."", 'That compares with around six to 12 months with current treatments, according to the National Cancer Institute.', '""These patients who would normally only have four to five months enjoy almost another full year of life,"" Bradner told CNBC.That time can make a huge difference for patients.', 'For Mangiameli, receiving treatment for small-cell lung cancer gave her years to get closer to her grandchild, who was born not long before she was diagnosed with the disease.', '""I had the impetus, the drive to make sure I survived. …', 'I just had my first grandchild, I have to live long enough for us to become pals,"" Mangiameli said.', 'Meanwhile, Bell said taking Imdelltra gave her the time to travel; she went on a trip with her daughter to San Diego.', '""I\'m trying to go as many places that I can get to,"" Bell told CNBC.Amgen is continuing to study Imdelltra in several trials, including some that will test the drug as an earlier line of treatment for small-cell lung cancer.', 'That includes a late-stage trial comparing Imdelltra with chemotherapy as a second-line treatment for the disease.', 'Amgen also plans to start another phase three study on the drug as a first-line treatment for patients at an advanced stage of small-cell lung cancer.', '""What makes us hopeful is, as you develop cancer medicines, that if they work in later stages of the disease, they can work even better when you move them"" to first-line treatment, Bradner said.']",-0.3129286844652374,"""I had the impetus, the drive to make sure I survived. …","Of the more than 2.2 million patients who are diagnosed with lung cancer worldwide each year, small-cell lung cancer comprises 15%, or 330,000, of those cases, Amgen said.",0.3947548912121699,"""What makes us hopeful is, as you develop cancer medicines, that if they work in later stages of the disease, they can work even better when you move them"" to first-line treatment, Bradner said.","Amgen's Bradner also said treatment options ""are pretty meager.",2024-05-19 Canada Goose jumps 16% after the company reports growth surge in China,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/16/canada-goose-goos-q4-earnings-report-2024.html,2024-05-16T20:34:21+0000,"In this articleShares of Canada Goose surged 16% on Thursday after the company reported earnings for the fiscal fourth quarter and announced it was expecting year-over-year sales growth for fiscal year 2025.Here's how the company did:Revenue increased 22% from the same period a year ago.Neil Bowden, Canada Goose's chief financial officer, said on an earnings call with analysts that store comparisons were ""relatively flat,"" but year-over-year sales growth for the period was led by locations in Greater China — the region comprising Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan — which saw a 29.7% increase. The broader Asia-Pacific region excluding Greater China was up 29.1%, and North American sales saw an increase of 24.5%.Net income for the fiscal fourth quarter ended March 31 swung to CA$7.6 million, or 5 Canadian cents per share, from a loss of CA$10 million, or 3 Canadian cents per share, in the year-earlier period.Bowden said the growth was supported by domestic shopping on the Chinese mainland, as well as mainland tourists driving ""strong growth"" in Hong Kong and Macao.Online and in-store sales for the period, he added, were ""bolstered by the company's Lunar New Year marketing campaign and complemented by a longer peak selling period, given the later date of the Lunar New Year compared to last year.""Moving forward, the finance chief said the company is expecting mid-single-digit percentage revenue growth the next fiscal year, which he expects will be guided by advances in the direct-to-consumer business. He also said he expects comparable store sales to grow ""somewhere in the low single digits.""Bowden said Canada Goose's business increase in China and Asia Pacific over the past three months is in line with the view of mid-single-digit growth for the luxury business. North America, however, has been under ""a little bit more pressure,"" he said.This upbeat performance comes after the company announced back in March that it was going to cut 17% of its corporate workforce. Canada Goose reported the layoffs had generated about CA$20 million (US$14.7 million) in productivity improvements and cost savings for the fiscal fourth quarter.",CNBC,16/05/2024,"[""In this articleShares of Canada Goose surged 16% on Thursday after the company reported earnings for the fiscal fourth quarter and announced it was expecting year-over-year sales growth for fiscal year 2025.Here's how the company did:Revenue increased 22% from the same period a year ago."", 'Neil Bowden, Canada Goose\'s chief financial officer, said on an earnings call with analysts that store comparisons were ""relatively flat,"" but year-over-year sales growth for the period was led by locations in Greater China — the region comprising Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan — which saw a 29.7% increase.', 'The broader Asia-Pacific region excluding Greater China was up 29.1%, and North American sales saw an increase of 24.5%.Net income for the fiscal fourth quarter ended March 31 swung to CA$7.6 million, or 5 Canadian cents per share, from a loss of CA$10 million, or 3 Canadian cents per share, in the year-earlier period.', 'Bowden said the growth was supported by domestic shopping on the Chinese mainland, as well as mainland tourists driving ""strong growth"" in Hong Kong and Macao.', 'Online and in-store sales for the period, he added, were ""bolstered by the company\'s Lunar New Year marketing campaign and complemented by a longer peak selling period, given the later date of the Lunar New Year compared to last year.', '""Moving forward, the finance chief said the company is expecting mid-single-digit percentage revenue growth the next fiscal year, which he expects will be guided by advances in the direct-to-consumer business.', 'He also said he expects comparable store sales to grow ""somewhere in the low single digits.', '""Bowden said Canada Goose\'s business increase in China and Asia Pacific over the past three months is in line with the view of mid-single-digit growth for the luxury business.', 'North America, however, has been under ""a little bit more pressure,"" he said.', 'This upbeat performance comes after the company announced back in March that it was going to cut 17% of its corporate workforce.', 'Canada Goose reported the layoffs had generated about CA$20 million (US$14.7 million) in productivity improvements and cost savings for the fiscal fourth quarter.']",0.3174784119382864,"Bowden said the growth was supported by domestic shopping on the Chinese mainland, as well as mainland tourists driving ""strong growth"" in Hong Kong and Macao.","North America, however, has been under ""a little bit more pressure,"" he said.",0.8158493746410717,"The broader Asia-Pacific region excluding Greater China was up 29.1%, and North American sales saw an increase of 24.5%.Net income for the fiscal fourth quarter ended March 31 swung to CA$7.6 million, or 5 Canadian cents per share, from a loss of CA$10 million, or 3 Canadian cents per share, in the year-earlier period.","North America, however, has been under ""a little bit more pressure,"" he said.",2024-05-19 "Netflix ad-supported tier has 40 million monthly users, nearly double previous count",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/15/netflix-ad-tier-has-40-million-users.html,2024-05-15T20:49:56+0000,"In this articleNetflix's cheaper, ad-supported tier has amassed 40 million global monthly active users, the company said Wednesday.That's nearly double the 23 million figure the streaming giant shared in January.The company also said it would launch its own advertising platform and no longer partner with Microsoft for that technology. The tech giant will remain a programmatic advertising partner, but will also be joined by other ad tech companies including The Trade Desk, Google Display & Video 360 and Magnite.Netflix will begin testing its ad tech platform in Canada later this year and plans to launch it in the U.S. by the end of the second quarter next year. The company aims to set the platform live everywhere by the end of 2025.The announcements came on Wednesday alongside Netflix's Upfront presentation, designed to woo advertisers. The streaming giant joined its media peers for the second time in making an annual pitch to lock in advertising for its platform.Earlier on Wednesday the company said it reached a deal to stream two National Football League games on Christmas Day this year, and at least one matchup on the same day in both 2025 and 2026.Netflix has the option to host one or two games in future years, with 2024 serving as a test, co-CEO Ted Sarandos told CNBC on Wednesday.It marks Netflix's first real foray into live sports after years of resistance. Sports, particularly the NFL, has proven to be the glue that keeps traditional TV intact — and has also proven to be a boost to streaming services.Terms of the NFL deal were not disclosed, but people familiar with the matter said Netflix will pay in the ballpark of $75 million per game. Spokespeople for the NFL and Netflix declined to comment.The streamer will hire its own announcers for the games and partner with existing production companies. Sarandos told CNBC he felt the NFL was the right fit because it matched the streamer's event strategy, allowing Netflix to effectively own the day.Netflix first introduced its ad-supported subscription plan in November 2022 as part of a wider effort to drive revenue amid slowing subscriber growth. That strategy included last year's password-sharing crackdown.Since then Netflix has been moving at breakneck speed to grow its ad-supported customer base, after admittedly being slow to join the pack. As part of that effort, Netflix got rid of its cheapest commercial-free plan in the U.S. and U.K.The company said Wednesday that 40% of all signups in countries that have the ad tier available are for that cheaper plan. Netflix now has 270 million total subscribers.For comparison, Disney's flagship service Disney+ has 117.6 million global subscribers, while Warner Bros. Discovery's streaming unit, led by Max, has 99.6 million. Those two companies recently announced they would offer a streaming bundle in order to prevent subscribers from dropping subscriptions and help them to make their streaming businesses profitable.Meanwhile, fledgling competitors are adding quarterly subscribers, but still trail. Comcast's Peacock had 34 million customers as of the most recent quarter, while Paramount Global's Paramount+ had 71 million.Netflix's monthly active ad-tier user figures come just a month after Netflix told investors it would no longer be providing quarterly subscriber number updates. The company said at the time that it was generating substantial profit and free cash flow and that its membership numbers were not the only factor in the company's growth. It said the metric lost significance after it started to offer multiple price points for memberships.Meanwhile, linear TV audiences continue to shrink and traditional media companies seek to gain a foothold in the streaming realm.Legacy media companies have suffered in recent quarters as the advertising market collapsed due to fears of a recession and surging interest rates. Companies typically pullback on advertising spending during times of economic uncertainty.But with a long runway ahead of it in the streaming business, Netflix has established itself as the leader in the segment as many other companies struggle to make their streaming platforms profitable.Disney executives recently referred to Netflix as the ""gold standard"" of streaming, and also noted that there's been additional supply in the ad market due to a competitor that recently entered the game, likely referencing Netflix.Media companies recently reported quarterly earnings, which showed the advertising market for traditional TV is still soft, albeit improving. Digital and streaming advertising, however, has been on the rebound.Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.",CNBC,15/05/2024,"[""In this articleNetflix's cheaper, ad-supported tier has amassed 40 million global monthly active users, the company said Wednesday."", ""That's nearly double the 23 million figure the streaming giant shared in January."", 'The company also said it would launch its own advertising platform and no longer partner with Microsoft for that technology.', 'The tech giant will remain a programmatic advertising partner, but will also be joined by other ad tech companies including The Trade Desk, Google Display & Video 360 and Magnite.', 'Netflix will begin testing its ad tech platform in Canada later this year and plans to launch it in the U.S. by the end of the second quarter next year.', ""The company aims to set the platform live everywhere by the end of 2025.The announcements came on Wednesday alongside Netflix's Upfront presentation, designed to woo advertisers."", 'The streaming giant joined its media peers for the second time in making an annual pitch to lock in advertising for its platform.', 'Earlier on Wednesday the company said it reached a deal to stream two National Football League games on Christmas Day this year, and at least one matchup on the same day in both 2025 and 2026.Netflix has the option to host one or two games in future years, with 2024 serving as a test, co-CEO Ted Sarandos told CNBC on Wednesday.', ""It marks Netflix's first real foray into live sports after years of resistance."", 'Sports, particularly the NFL, has proven to be the glue that keeps traditional TV intact — and has also proven to be a boost to streaming services.', 'Terms of the NFL deal were not disclosed, but people familiar with the matter said Netflix will pay in the ballpark of $75 million per game.', 'Spokespeople for the NFL and Netflix declined to comment.', 'The streamer will hire its own announcers for the games and partner with existing production companies.', ""Sarandos told CNBChe felt the NFL was the right fit because it matched the streamer's event strategy, allowing Netflix to effectively own the day."", 'Netflix first introduced its ad-supported subscription plan in November 2022 as part of a wider effort to drive revenueamid slowing subscriber growth.', ""That strategy included last year'spassword-sharing crackdown."", 'Since then Netflix has been moving at breakneck speed to grow its ad-supported customer base, after admittedly being slow to join the pack.', 'As part of that effort, Netflix got rid of its cheapest commercial-free plan in the U.S. and U.K.The company said Wednesday that 40% of all signups in countries that have the ad tier available are for that cheaper plan.', 'Netflix now has 270 million total subscribers.', ""For comparison, Disney's flagship service Disney+ has 117.6 million global subscribers, while Warner Bros. Discovery's streaming unit, led by Max, has 99.6 million."", 'Those two companies recently announced they would offer a streaming bundle in order to prevent subscribers from dropping subscriptions and help them to make their streaming businesses profitable.', 'Meanwhile, fledgling competitors are adding quarterly subscribers, but still trail.', ""Comcast's Peacock had 34 million customers as of the most recent quarter, while Paramount Global's Paramount+ had 71 million."", ""Netflix's monthly active ad-tier user figures come just a month after Netflix told investors it would no longer be providing quarterly subscriber number updates."", ""The company said at the time that it was generating substantial profit and free cash flow and that its membership numbers were not the only factor in the company's growth."", 'It said the metric lost significance after it started to offer multiple price points for memberships.', 'Meanwhile, linear TV audiences continue to shrink and traditional media companies seek to gain a foothold in the streaming realm.', 'Legacy media companies have suffered in recent quarters as the advertising market collapsed due to fears of a recession and surging interest rates.', 'Companies typically pullback on advertising spending during times of economic uncertainty.', 'But with a long runway ahead of it in the streaming business, Netflix has established itself as the leader in the segment as many other companies struggle to make their streaming platforms profitable.', 'Disney executives recently referred to Netflix as the ""gold standard"" of streaming, and also noted that there\'s been additional supply in the ad market due to a competitor that recently entered the game, likely referencing Netflix.', 'Media companies recently reported quarterly earnings, which showed the advertising market for traditional TV is still soft, albeit improving.', 'Digital and streaming advertising, however, has been on the rebound.', 'Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.']",0.183909881741724,The company said at the time that it was generating substantial profit and free cash flow and that its membership numbers were not the only factor in the company's growth.,Legacy media companies have suffered in recent quarters as the advertising market collapsed due to fears of a recession and surging interest rates.,0.5293343976924294,"Sports, particularly the NFL, has proven to be the glue that keeps traditional TV intact — and has also proven to be a boost to streaming services.",Legacy media companies have suffered in recent quarters as the advertising market collapsed due to fears of a recession and surging interest rates.,2024-05-19 "Stellantis to rapidly grow exports of Chinese EVs to Europe, other countries",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/14/stellantis-china-ev-exports.html,2024-05-14T13:04:42+0000,"In this articleAutomaker Stellantis expects to quickly grow sales of China-made electric vehicles outside of the country through a new joint venture with Leapmotor, starting later this year, according to the two companies.The companies said Tuesday that beginning in September, sales of the China-built Leapmotor vehicles will begin through Stellantis' distribution networks, including dealers in Europe — France, Italy, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Greece and Romania.Those markets will be followed by the Middle East and Africa, India and Asia Pacific, and South America in late 2024, the companies said.The expansion plans do not currently include distribution in the U.S., Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares said Tuesday following a press conference in Hangzhou, China, where Leapmotor is based. That's due, in part, to new American tariffs on China-made EVs, Tavares said, citing among other reasons as well.The Biden administration on Tuesday announced stiff new tariff rates on billions' worth of Chinese imports, including quadrupling tariffs on imported Chinese electric vehicles, from 25% to 100%. ""There is very limited Chinese offering in the U.S. market, so it is not a priority for us,"" Tavares said. ""There is a lot in Europe because we see Europe has a very different approach for this problem. ... It looks like the U.S. is going for a very strong protectionism. Whereas, for the time being, I see Europe is keeping the market reasonably open.""The joint venture's expansion plans include at least six EVs by 2027, according to a presentation by Stellantis and Leapmotor. The cars, initially budget vehicles, are expected to be complementary to Stellantis' current vehicle lineup, the companies said.The announcement comes amid increasing geopolitical tensions surrounding China-made electric vehicles in the U.S., Europe and other regions. Many in and around the automotive industry fear the less-expensive, China-made vehicles will flood the markets, undercutting domestic-produced EVs.""From a Stellantis perspective, our position is we compete. We compete with the Chinese carmakers and we compete as strongly as we can because it's the best way to learn. It's the best way to stay fit for the global race in which we are now part of,"" Tavares said.Tavares said Tuesday that the Chinese carmakers, which he previously called Stellantis' greatest competitors, are expected to rapidly grow internationally — with or without joint venture assistance.""Whether I like it or not, with me or without me, Leapmotor would have been in Europe anyway … perhaps not as fast, perhaps not as strongly but they would have gone to Europe,"" Tavares said. ""What I am doing is just trying to be opportunistic against a dynamic that has been created by the Chinese carmakers.""Chinese companies accounted for 8% of Europe's all-electric vehicle sales as of September and could increase their share to 15% by 2025, the European Union said in October 2023. The EU believes Chinese EVs are undercutting the prices of local models by about 20% in the European market.The influx of Chinese EVs has spurred the European Union to launch government support for the industry.""The partnership between Leapmotor and Stellantis demonstrates a high level of efficiency, opening a new chapter in the global integration of China's intelligent electric vehicle industry,"" Leapmotor founder, chairman and CEO Jiangming Zhu said in a release. ""We believe that this cooperation can give Leapmotor a boost to become a respected world-class intelligent electric vehicle company.""The companies declined to disclose sales volume expectations for Leapmotor vehicles sold through Stellantis' sales network, which is expected to grow from 200 locations to up to 500 by 2026. Leapmotor reported deliveries of 144,155 vehicles in 2023, a roughly 30% increase from the previous year.Stellantis owns 51% of the joint venture with Leapmotor, announced earlier this year and including an investment of 1.5 billion euros in Leapmotor for a roughly 21% stake in the company.As part of the deal, Stellantis has exclusive rights for export and sale, as well as for manufacturing Leapmotor products outside of Greater China.",CNBC,14/05/2024,"['In this articleAutomaker Stellantis expects to quickly grow sales of China-made electric vehicles outside of the country through a new joint venture with Leapmotor, starting later this year, according to the two companies.', ""The companies said Tuesday that beginning in September, sales of the China-built Leapmotor vehicles will begin through Stellantis' distribution networks, including dealers in Europe — France, Italy, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Greece and Romania."", 'Those markets will be followed by the Middle East and Africa, India and Asia Pacific, and South America in late 2024, the companies said.', 'The expansion plans do not currently include distribution in the U.S., Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares said Tuesday following a press conference in Hangzhou, China, where Leapmotor is based.', ""That's due, in part, to new American tariffs on China-made EVs, Tavares said, citing among other reasons as well."", 'The Biden administration on Tuesday announced stiff new tariffrates on billions\' worth ofChinese imports, including quadrupling tariffs on imported Chinese electric vehicles, from 25% to 100%.""There is very limited Chinese offering in the U.S. market, so it is not a priority for us,"" Tavares said. ""', 'There is a lot in Europe because we see Europe has a very different approach for this problem. ...', 'It looks like the U.S. is going for a very strong protectionism.', 'Whereas, for the time being, I see Europe is keeping the market reasonably open.', '""The joint venture\'s expansion plans include at least six EVs by 2027, according to a presentation by Stellantis and Leapmotor.', ""The cars, initially budget vehicles, are expected to be complementary to Stellantis' current vehicle lineup, the companies said."", 'The announcement comes amid increasing geopolitical tensions surrounding China-made electric vehicles in the U.S., Europe and other regions.', 'Many in and around the automotive industry fear the less-expensive, China-made vehicles will flood the markets, undercutting domestic-produced EVs.', '""From a Stellantis perspective, our position is we compete.', ""We compete with the Chinese carmakers and we compete as strongly as we can because it's the best way to learn."", 'It\'s the best way to stay fit for the global race in which we are now part of,"" Tavares said.', ""Tavares said Tuesday that the Chinese carmakers, which he previously called Stellantis' greatest competitors, are expected to rapidly grow internationally — with or without joint venture assistance."", '""Whether I like it or not, with me or without me, Leapmotor would have been in Europe anyway … perhaps not as fast, perhaps not as strongly but they would have gone to Europe,"" Tavares said. ""', 'What I am doing is just trying to be opportunistic against a dynamic that has been created by the Chinese carmakers.', '""Chinese companies accounted for 8% of Europe\'s all-electric vehicle sales as of September and could increase their share to 15% by 2025, theEuropean Union said in October 2023.The EU believes Chinese EVs are undercutting the prices of local models by about 20% in the European market.', 'The influx of Chinese EVs has spurred the European Union to launch government support for the industry.', '""The partnership between Leapmotor and Stellantis demonstrates a high level of efficiency, opening a new chapter in the global integration of China\'s intelligent electric vehicle industry,"" Leapmotor founder, chairman and CEO Jiangming Zhu said in a release. ""', 'We believe that this cooperation can give Leapmotor a boost to become a respected world-class intelligent electric vehicle company.', '""The companies declined to disclose sales volume expectations for Leapmotor vehicles sold through Stellantis\' sales network, which is expected to grow from 200 locations to up to 500 by 2026.', 'Leapmotor reported deliveries of 144,155 vehicles in 2023, a roughly 30% increase from the previous year.', 'Stellantis owns 51% of the joint venture with Leapmotor, announced earlier this year and including an investment of 1.5 billion euros in Leapmotor for a roughly 21% stake in the company.', 'As part of the deal, Stellantis has exclusive rights for export and sale, as well as for manufacturing Leapmotor products outside of Greater China.']",0.2147446816515975,We believe that this cooperation can give Leapmotor a boost to become a respected world-class intelligent electric vehicle company.,"Many in and around the automotive industry fear the less-expensive, China-made vehicles will flood the markets, undercutting domestic-produced EVs.",0.6878737466675895,"Leapmotor reported deliveries of 144,155 vehicles in 2023, a roughly 30% increase from the previous year.","Many in and around the automotive industry fear the less-expensive, China-made vehicles will flood the markets, undercutting domestic-produced EVs.",2024-05-19 NRF rejects Shein membership as retailer pursues U.S. IPO,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/13/nrf-rejects-shein-membership-as-retailer-pursues-us-ipo.html,2024-05-13T19:31:58+0000,"Chinese-founded fast fashion behemoth Shein isn't just working to win over lawmakers in Washington, D.C., as it gears up for a potential U.S. IPO, it's also trying to win over the broader U.S. retail industry.It'll have to go through the National Retail Federation first. Shein, which filed to go public in the U.S. late last year, has tried to become a member of the retail industry's largest and most powerful trade association but has been repeatedly rejected, people familiar with the matter told CNBC. The people spoke on the condition of anonymity because the talks are private. For most companies, becoming a member of the NRF wouldn't have a major impact on their business. The organization is the retail industry's primary lobbying machine in Washington, D.C., and provides access to NRF events and research on market trends, among other benefits.But Shein is in the midst of a charm offensive. It has been working to convince lawmakers that it can be trusted as a public company listed on American exchanges despite concerns over its ties to China, its supply chain and its use of a trade law loophole.Shein is also caught in the middle of a complex geopolitical rivalry between the U.S. and Beijing and has been targeted by lawmakers who are concerned the company shares data on American consumers with the Chinese government and produces goods made with forced labor. The intense scrutiny Shein has faced reportedly pushed the retailer to consider going public in London instead of the U.S.Shein was recently valued at $66 billion, CNBC previously reported, and is poised to be one of the biggest listings of the year. It pulls in revenue well above $30 billion a year, according to a key retail partner. Its rise has eaten into the market share of a host of U.S.-based rivals including Gap Inc., TJX Companies and Macy's, and has challenged mass-market players like Target, Walmart and Amazon.If Shein can earn a stamp of approval from the de facto voice of the retail industry, which is led by the largest retailers and tech companies on the planet, it could help legitimize Shein in the eyes of federal lawmakers. It could also smooth over what's been an otherwise bumpy path to a U.S. initial public offering. ""That definitely would put a little bit more pressure on the politicians to accept the company, right? Simply because the peers recognize the company and they think that it is a worthy competitor. … That would definitely create a little bit more legitimacy,"" said Wharton School professor John Zhang, founding director of the Penn Wharton China Center. ""Most importantly, I think that [NRF membership] really creates the perception amongst the investors that this is just one of the normal retailers."" Steve Dennis, a retail consultant who previously held executive positions at Neiman Marcus and Sears, agreed that NRF's acceptance of Shein could be a positive catalyst for the company. ""I don't think that would automatically mean the [New York Stock Exchange] or the federal government's going to be OK with them, but I think it would be kind of a feather in their cap, a meaningful step in the right direction,"" said Dennis. ""You sort of look at the NRF as being the voice of the industry, so if it's OK with them, maybe it should be OK for us."" The NRF hasn't totally shut the door on Shein's membership application and has been in talks with the retailer about its request, people familiar with the dynamic told CNBC, adding the trade group is open to welcoming Shein. A spokesperson for the NRF said the organization ""does not comment on our membership process or on individual retailers."" It said it ""disagrees with many of the characterizations"" in CNBC's report but declined to elaborate further.Shein declined to comment.It's unclear why the NRF rejected Shein's membership application, but according to one of the people familiar, someone with sway is strongly against the company's admittance. The person declined to provide specifics surrounding who could be exerting that influence.The NRF's board has a leadership team and an executive committee. Those people have the closest counsel with the trade group's CEO, Matthew Shay, who has been involved in membership discussions with Shein, according to two people familiar with the organization's dealings.The leadership team is comprised of Shay; Walmart U.S. CEO John Furner; BJ's Wholesale Club CEO Bob Eddy; and Mike George, the former president and CEO of Qurate Retail, which owns QVC. The executive committee includes eight other top industry insiders, including Target CEO Brian Cornell and Macy's CEO Tony Spring.Like most trade associations, retailers looking to become a member of the NRF are typically granted access as long as they're involved in retailing and pay the required dues, according to three NRF board members who spoke to CNBC on the condition of anonymity. The specific requirements for becoming a member of the NRF and the process for screening new members is unclear. The NRF declined to answer questions about those details.An NRF membership application form that can be found online states: ""Companies principally engaged in retailing are eligible for membership in the Federation."" The form includes questions about a retailer's annual sales volume and total number of retail units and explains that NRF bylaws requires that members pay dues ""based on total annual sales as reported in the most recent fiscal year.""The NRF said the form is outdated by about a year but declined to say what, if any, material changes had been made to the membership form since the document was uploaded online. The board members who spoke to CNBC, who each have years of experience on the NRF's board, said Shein's membership application hadn't come up in board meetings and that they aren't involved in deciding which companies are granted access. This suggests top NRF brass would be the ultimate decision makers on prospective members.""There are quiet conversations that will happen around topics like this. As part of our governance, we certainly look at membership, overall trends, we talk about membership proposals and new additions, but we don't typically get into specifics around individual companies,"" one of the board members said. Two of the board members said they weren't aware of any instances where the NRF denied a retailer membership. One noted the trade group is actually trying to grow its ranks and has worked to expand into nontraditional markets, including the tech sector. ""I don't think they are in the business of turning anyone down,"" one of the board members told CNBC. Every year, the NRF hosts a massive conference in New York City dubbed ""Retail's Big Show"" that features the industry's top companies. In recent years, Shein has been conspicuously absent from the event. That's not to say that Shein isn't relevant to NRF's attendees — the impact the company has had on the fashion industry was widely discussed by conference goers and during official sessions — but the retailer wasn't invited to talk about the strategies that drove its meteoric rise. At the NRF's Big Show in January, there was a panel about Shein and Chinese retailer Temu titled ""Coming to America: What Can We Learn from Chinese Brands in the U.S."" that was led by retail experts from Publicis Groupe and Coresight Research. During the panel, the two experts reflected on the strategies that have fueled Shein's growth and outlined the ""10 essential actions"" retailers need to do ""to rival Shein and Temu."" Throughout the event, attendees eagerly raised their phones in the air to snap photos of the slides. Meanwhile, at retail conferences elsewhere in the world, Shein has been a constant. Over the last year, the company had a presence at a number of high-profile industry conferences, including the OMR Festival in Hamburg, Germany, the Global E-commerce Leaders Forum in Los Angeles, the World Retail Congress in Paris and even the World Economic Forum's Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland, according to LinkedIn posts and conference agendas. In March, Shein presented at the annual Shoptalk conference in Las Vegas for the second year in a row and a company executive appeared on stage alongside counterparts from sustainable fashion brand Reformation and home goods retailer Wayfair. While Shein has been widely welcomed on stage at these events, which rely heavily on sponsors to drive revenue, the reception was a bit cooler behind closed doors. At a cocktail party on the sidelines of Shoptalk, a young founder of a fashion sustainability startup quietly referred to Shein as their ""mortal enemy"" when they saw two of its staffers join the event. The founder was referring to some of the sustainability concerns that Shein has faced, including accusations that its cheap clothing fuels overconsumption and that its clothes are made with materials sourced from regions that are hot spots for forced labor. Dennis, the retail consultant, posited the NRF's concerns about Shein, at least on their face, could be related to some of the ethical questions surrounding the company but said what angers the retail community the most is how Shein is competing — and taking market share. ""Their growth is extraordinary, right? ... They've gone from zero to an enormous amount of market share in just a couple of years, so from that standpoint, if you're a company that competes with them, you're losing market share,"" said Dennis. ""Nobody likes that."" Plus, he added, there is the perception that Shein is competing unfairly because of its use of a specific U.S. tariff law loophole called the de minimis provision. Under the provision, packages valued under $800 are not charged import duties and aren't subject to the same level of screening as other packages. Shein's success is routinely attributed to the claim that it benefits from not paying tariffs, a charge the retailer denies. For example, in 2022, Gap, H&M and David's Bridal paid $700 million, $205 million and $19.5 million in import duties, respectively, while Shein and Temu paid nothing at all, according to the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party. The committee is investigating Shein over its use of the de minimis provision and concerns that the goods the company ships to the U.S. are made with forced labor. Shein has said that it's committed to adhering to the laws and regulations of the respective markets that it operates in and is working to eradicate its supply chain of raw materials sourced from banned regions.Considering the ire the retail community has for Shein, the NRF is stuck between a rock and a hard place. If the trade group accepts Shein as a member, it could upset its influential member base, but it also needs a valid reason to deny the company access. The NRF could lean on the serious ethical concerns surrounding Shein, but they're not unique to the company. Last year when the committee on the CCP opened a probe into Shein about its use of forced labor, it sent similar letters to Adidas and Nike, whose vice president of global retail operations was on the board of the NRF's foundation in 2022. Plus, using raw materials from regions that are hot spots for forced labor or other human rights issues is a problem for the entire fashion industry. It's also an issue that has mired other global corporate powers that are on the NRF board. Rejecting Shein on the grounds that it unfairly uses the de minimis provision would also be a tough sell. While many NRF members are strongly against de minimis, or at least a competitor's use of it, the NRF has yet to take a firm position on the matter, contrary to some other trade associations.When asked for the NRF's official position on de minimis, a spokesperson said it didn't have one. ""We encourage the collection of more detailed information by U.S. Customs and Border Protection to improve enforcement and ensure that only legitimate products are entered under the program,"" the spokesperson said. Of course, Shein's ties to China could be enough to exclude it from NRF membership, but the trade group is considering expanding internationally, according to one of the organization's board members. If those plans come to fruition, the trade group will have to determine where to draw the line. Absent a clear reason for excluding Shein from membership, the NRF's decision could raise antitrust concerns, legal experts said. While joining the NRF is unlikely to make or break a retailer's business, it is seen as having a plus side. The benefits of NRF membership — advocacy, legislative lobbying and access to industry research, connections and events — could be seen as a competitive edge for its members.Considering that argument, if Shein were to be excluded from an organization made up of its competitors, it could have an antitrust argument. ""If they are a unique competitor and the powerful people in the industry are controlling the NRF to keep them out, that could raise concerns,"" said Steven Salop, professor emeritus of economics and law at Georgetown University's Law Center. ""The question is whether it's enough to have a significant impact on competition.""",CNBC,13/05/2024,"[""Chinese-founded fast fashion behemoth Shein isn't just working to win over lawmakers in Washington, D.C., as it gears up for a potential U.S. IPO, it's also trying to win over the broader U.S. retail industry."", ""It'll have to go through the National Retail Federation first."", ""Shein, which filed to go public in the U.S. late last year, has tried to become a member of the retail industry's largest and most powerful trade association but has been repeatedly rejected, people familiar with the matter told CNBC."", 'The people spoke on the condition of anonymity because the talks are private.', ""For most companies, becoming a member of the NRF wouldn't have a major impact on their business."", ""The organization is the retail industry's primary lobbying machine in Washington, D.C., and provides access to NRF events and research on market trends, among other benefits."", 'But Shein is in the midst of a charm offensive.', 'It has been working to convince lawmakers that it can be trusted as a public company listed on American exchanges despite concerns over its ties to China, its supply chain and its use of a trade law loophole.', 'Shein is also caught in the middle of a complex geopolitical rivalrybetween the U.S. and Beijing and has been targeted by lawmakers who are concerned the company shares data on American consumers with the Chinese government and produces goods made with forced labor.', 'The intense scrutiny Shein has faced reportedly pushed the retailer to consider going public in London instead of the U.S.Shein was recently valued at $66 billion, CNBC previously reported, and is poised to be one of the biggest listings of the year.', 'It pulls in revenue well above $30 billion a year, according to a key retail partner.', ""Its rise has eaten into the market share of a host of U.S.-based rivals including Gap Inc., TJX Companies and Macy's,and has challenged mass-market players like Target, Walmart and Amazon."", 'If Shein can earn a stamp of approval from the de facto voice of the retail industry, which is led by the largest retailers and tech companies on the planet, it could help legitimize Shein in the eyes of federal lawmakers.', ""It could also smooth over what's been an otherwise bumpy path to a U.S. initial public offering."", '""That definitely would put a little bit more pressure on the politicians to accept the company, right?', 'Simply because the peers recognize the company and they think that it is a worthy competitor. …', 'That would definitely create a little bit more legitimacy,"" said Wharton School professor John Zhang, founding director of the Penn Wharton China Center. ""', 'Most importantly, I think that [NRF membership] really creates the perception amongst the investors that this is just one of the normal retailers.', '""Steve Dennis, a retail consultant who previously held executive positions at Neiman Marcus and Sears, agreed that NRF\'s acceptance of Shein could be a positive catalyst for the company.', '""I don\'t think that would automatically mean the [New York Stock Exchange] or the federal government\'s going to be OK with them, but I think it would be kind of a feather in their cap, a meaningful step in the right direction,"" said Dennis. ""', ""You sort of look at the NRF as being the voice of the industry, so if it's OK with them, maybe it should be OK for us."", '""The NRF hasn\'t totally shut the door on Shein\'s membership application and has been in talks with the retailer about its request, people familiar with the dynamic told CNBC, adding the trade group is open to welcoming Shein.', 'A spokesperson for the NRF said the organization ""does not comment on our membership process or on individual retailers.', '""It said it ""disagrees with many of the characterizations"" in CNBC\'s report but declined to elaborate further.', 'Shein declined to comment.', ""It's unclear why the NRF rejected Shein's membership application, but according to one of the people familiar, someone with sway is strongly against the company's admittance."", 'The person declined to provide specifics surrounding who could be exerting that influence.', ""The NRF's board has a leadership team and an executive committee."", ""Those people have the closest counsel with the trade group's CEO, Matthew Shay, who has been involved in membership discussions with Shein, according to two people familiar with the organization's dealings."", ""The leadership team is comprised of Shay; Walmart U.S. CEO John Furner; BJ's Wholesale Club CEO Bob Eddy; and Mike George, the former president and CEO of Qurate Retail, which owns QVC."", ""The executive committee includes eight other top industry insiders, including Target CEO Brian Cornell and Macy's CEO Tony Spring."", ""Like most trade associations, retailers looking to become a member of the NRF are typically granted access as long as they're involved in retailing and pay the required dues, according to three NRF board members who spoke to CNBC on the condition of anonymity."", 'The specific requirements for becoming a member of the NRF and the process for screening new members is unclear.', 'The NRF declined to answer questions about those details.', 'An NRF membership application form that can be found online states: ""Companies principally engaged in retailing are eligible for membership in the Federation.""', 'The form includes questions about a retailer\'s annual sales volume and total number of retail units and explains that NRF bylaws requires that members pay dues ""based on total annual sales as reported in the most recent fiscal year.', '""The NRF said the form is outdated by about a year but declined to say what, if any, material changes had been made to the membership form since the document was uploaded online.', ""The board members who spoke to CNBC, who each have years of experience on the NRF's board, said Shein's membership application hadn't come up in board meetings and that they aren't involved in deciding which companies are granted access."", 'This suggests top NRF brass would be the ultimate decision makers on prospective members.', '""There are quiet conversations that will happen around topics like this.', 'As part of our governance, we certainly look at membership, overall trends, we talk about membership proposals and new additions, but we don\'t typically get into specifics around individual companies,"" one of the board members said.', ""Two of the board members said they weren't aware of any instances where the NRF denied a retailer membership."", 'One noted the trade group is actually trying to grow its ranks and has worked to expand into nontraditional markets, including the tech sector.', '""I don\'t think they are in the business of turning anyone down,"" one of the board members told CNBC.Every year, the NRF hosts a massive conference in New York City dubbed ""Retail\'s Big Show"" that features the industry\'s top companies.', 'In recent years, Shein has been conspicuously absent from the event.', ""That's not to say that Shein isn't relevant to NRF's attendees — the impact the company has had on the fashion industry was widely discussed by conference goers and during official sessions — but the retailer wasn't invited to talk about the strategies that drove its meteoric rise."", 'At the NRF\'s Big Show in January, there was a panel about Shein and Chinese retailer Temu titled ""Coming to America: What Can We Learn from Chinese Brands in the U.S."" that was led by retail experts from Publicis Groupe and Coresight Research.', 'During the panel, the two experts reflected on the strategies that have fueled Shein\'s growth and outlined the ""10 essential actions"" retailers need to do ""to rival Shein and Temu.""', 'Throughout the event, attendees eagerly raised their phones in the air to snap photos of the slides.', 'Meanwhile, at retail conferences elsewhere in the world, Shein has been a constant.', ""Over the last year, the company had a presence at a number of high-profile industry conferences, including the OMR Festival in Hamburg, Germany, the Global E-commerce Leaders Forum in Los Angeles, the World Retail Congress in Paris and even the World Economic Forum's Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland, according to LinkedIn posts and conference agendas."", 'In March, Shein presented at the annual Shoptalk conference in Las Vegas for the second year in a row and a company executive appeared on stage alongside counterparts from sustainable fashion brand Reformation and home goods retailer Wayfair.', 'While Shein has been widely welcomed on stage at these events, which rely heavily on sponsors to drive revenue, the reception was a bit cooler behind closed doors.', 'At a cocktail party on the sidelines of Shoptalk, a young founder of a fashion sustainability startup quietly referred to Shein as their ""mortal enemy"" when they saw two of its staffers join the event.', 'The founder was referring to some of the sustainability concerns that Shein has faced, including accusations that its cheap clothing fuels overconsumption and that its clothes are made with materials sourced from regions that are hot spots for forced labor.', ""Dennis, the retail consultant, posited the NRF's concerns about Shein, at least on their face, could be related to some of the ethical questions surrounding the company but said what angers the retail community the most is how Shein is competing — and taking market share."", '""Their growth is extraordinary, right? ...', 'They\'ve gone from zero to an enormous amount of market share in just a couple of years, so from that standpoint, if you\'re a company that competes with them, you\'re losing market share,"" said Dennis. ""', 'Nobody likes that.', '""Plus, he added, there is the perception that Shein is competing unfairly because of its use of a specific U.S. tariff law loophole called the de minimis provision.', ""Under the provision, packages valued under $800 are not charged import duties and aren't subject to the same level of screening as other packages."", ""Shein's success is routinely attributed to the claim that it benefits from not paying tariffs, a charge the retailer denies."", ""For example, in 2022, Gap, H&M and David's Bridal paid $700 million, $205 million and $19.5 million in import duties, respectively, while Shein and Temu paid nothing at all, according to the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party."", 'The committee is investigating Shein over its use of the de minimis provision and concerns that the goods the company ships to the U.S. are made with forced labor.', ""Shein has said that it's committed to adhering to the laws and regulations of the respective markets that it operates in and is working to eradicate its supply chain of raw materials sourced from banned regions."", 'Considering the ire the retail community has for Shein, the NRF is stuck between a rock and a hard place.', 'If the trade group accepts Shein as a member, it could upset its influential member base, but it also needs a valid reason to deny the company access.', ""The NRF could lean on the serious ethical concerns surrounding Shein, but they're not unique to the company."", ""Last year when the committee on the CCP opened a probe into Shein about its use of forced labor, it sent similar letters to Adidas and Nike, whose vice president of global retail operations was on the board of the NRF's foundation in 2022.Plus, using raw materials from regions that are hot spots for forced labor or other human rights issues is a problem for the entire fashion industry."", ""It's also an issue that has mired other global corporate powers that are on the NRF board."", 'Rejecting Shein on the grounds that it unfairly uses the de minimis provision would also be a tough sell.', ""While many NRF members are strongly against de minimis, or at least a competitor's use of it, the NRF has yet to take a firm position on the matter, contrary to some other trade associations."", ""When asked for the NRF's official position on de minimis, a spokesperson said it didn't have one."", '""We encourage the collection of more detailed information by U.S. Customs and Border Protection to improve enforcement and ensure that only legitimate products are entered under the program,"" the spokesperson said.', ""Of course, Shein's ties to China could be enough to exclude it from NRF membership, but the trade group is considering expanding internationally, according to one of the organization's board members."", 'If those plans come to fruition, the trade group will have to determine where to draw the line.', ""Absent a clear reason for excluding Shein from membership, the NRF's decision could raise antitrust concerns, legal experts said."", ""While joining the NRF is unlikely to make or break a retailer's business, it is seen as having a plus side."", 'The benefits of NRF membership — advocacy, legislative lobbying and access to industry research, connections and events — could be seen as a competitive edge for its members.', 'Considering that argument, if Shein were to be excluded from an organization made up of its competitors, it could have an antitrust argument.', '""If they are a unique competitor and the powerful people in the industry are controlling the NRF to keep them out, that could raise concerns,"" said Steven Salop, professor emeritus of economics and law at Georgetown University\'s Law Center. ""', 'The question is whether it\'s enough to have a significant impact on competition.""']",0.165650841986897,"""I don't think that would automatically mean the [New York Stock Exchange] or the federal government's going to be OK with them, but I think it would be kind of a feather in their cap, a meaningful step in the right direction,"" said Dennis. ""","Last year when the committee on the CCP opened a probe into Shein about its use of forced labor, it sent similar letters to Adidas and Nike, whose vice president of global retail operations was on the board of the NRF's foundation in 2022.Plus, using raw materials from regions that are hot spots for forced labor or other human rights issues is a problem for the entire fashion industry.",0.3335876115437212,"""Steve Dennis, a retail consultant who previously held executive positions at Neiman Marcus and Sears, agreed that NRF's acceptance of Shein could be a positive catalyst for the company.","They've gone from zero to an enormous amount of market share in just a couple of years, so from that standpoint, if you're a company that competes with them, you're losing market share,"" said Dennis. """,2024-05-19 "Dodge and Ram boss Tim Kuniskis, father of the Hellcat, to retire from Stellantis",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/17/dodge-ram-boss-tim-kuniskis-to-retire-from-stellantis.html,2024-05-17T16:57:09+0000,"In this articleDETROIT – Stellantis' Dodge and Ram brands CEO Tim Kuniskis is retiring after a nearly 32-year career with the automaker and its predecessors, the company announced Friday.Kuniskis, who has led several of the carmaker's brands in North America, is best known for leading Dodge for most of the last decade or so. He is considered the ""father"" of Dodge's high-performance Hellcat models and ""the unofficial spokesman"" for American muscle cars.During his tenure, Dodge reestablished itself as a quintessential American muscle car brand. The brand did so with vehicles such as the more than 700 horsepower Challenger and Charger Hellcat models and controversial Challenger Demon drag race cars.Kuniskis will be replaced by Chrysler brand CEO Christine Feuell, who will lead Ram in addition to Chrysler, and Matt McAlear, who will be promoted from Dodge's sales lead to brand CEO and a member of Stellantis' top executive team. The appointments are effective June 1, the company said.The changes come as Stellantis carries out a restructuring, including layoffs and cost cutting. It has struggled with U.S. sales, which declined 1.2% last year in a market that grew 12.3%. The company was the only major automaker to report a yearly decline, according to Motor intelligence data.""I want to take the opportunity to warmly thank Tim for his passion, commitment and contributions to Stellantis and in defining the vision of the future electrified Ram and Dodge brands. I wish him well in his retirement,"" Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares said in a release. ""I am confident that Chris will continue the work of Tim in leading the iconic Ram brand. Matt will bring a fresh perspective, while continuing to draw on the heritage of our iconic Dodge brand and leading the transition of the brand toward a sustainable future.""While the company did not invest in all-new products for Dodge, Kuniskis, a salesperson and marketer, was able to grow awareness and sales of the brand's Charger, Challenger and Durango vehicles over the years. Dodge often sparked interest by increasing V-8 engine performance or announcing new ""buzz"" models.Kuniskis has been a member of Stellantis' top executive team since the company was established through a merger of Fiat Chrysler and French automaker PSA Groupe in January 2021. He also served on the top board for Fiat Chrysler, under late CEO Sergio Marchionne.Kuniskis' departure is the latest in a string of changes to the company since the automaker was established. Recent changes have include a shuffle of Jeep's top executives; North America head Mark Stewart leaving to become CEO of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.; and a shakeup late last year of the company's international operations like the South America and Asia-Pacific regions, including China.",CNBC,17/05/2024,"[""In this articleDETROIT – Stellantis' Dodge and Ram brands CEO Tim Kuniskis is retiring after a nearly 32-year career with the automaker and its predecessors, the company announced Friday."", ""Kuniskis, who has led several of the carmaker's brands in North America, is best known for leading Dodge for most of the last decade or so."", 'He is considered the ""father"" of Dodge\'s high-performance Hellcat models and ""the unofficial spokesman"" for American muscle cars.', 'During his tenure, Dodge reestablished itself as a quintessential American muscle car brand.', 'The brand did so with vehicles such as the more than 700 horsepower Challenger and Charger Hellcat models and controversial Challenger Demon drag race cars.', ""Kuniskis will be replaced by Chrysler brand CEO Christine Feuell, who will lead Ram in addition to Chrysler, and Matt McAlear, who will be promoted from Dodge's sales lead to brand CEO and a member of Stellantis' top executive team."", 'The appointments are effective June 1, the company said.', 'The changes come as Stellantis carries out a restructuring, including layoffs and cost cutting.', 'It has struggled with U.S. sales, which declined 1.2% last year in a market that grew 12.3%.', 'The company was the only major automaker to report a yearly decline, according to Motor intelligence data.', '""I want to take the opportunity to warmly thank Tim for his passion, commitment and contributions to Stellantis and in defining the vision of the future electrified Ram and Dodge brands.', 'I wish him well in his retirement,"" Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares said in a release. ""', 'I am confident that Chris will continue the work of Tim in leading the iconic Ram brand.', 'Matt will bring a fresh perspective, while continuing to draw on the heritage of our iconic Dodge brand and leading the transition of the brand toward a sustainable future.', '""While the company did not invest in all-new products for Dodge, Kuniskis, a salesperson and marketer, was able to grow awareness and sales of the brand\'s Charger, Challenger and Durango vehicles over the years.', 'Dodge often sparked interest by increasing V-8 engine performance or announcing new ""buzz"" models.', ""Kuniskis has been a member of Stellantis' top executive team since the company was established through a merger of Fiat Chrysler and French automaker PSA Groupe in January 2021."", 'He also served on the top board for Fiat Chrysler, under late CEO Sergio Marchionne.', ""Kuniskis' departure is the latest in a string of changes to the company since the automaker was established."", ""Recent changes have include a shuffle of Jeep's top executives; North America head Mark Stewart leaving to become CEO of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.; and a shakeup late last year of the company's international operations like the South America and Asia-Pacific regions, including China.""]",0.2612220211553282,"""I want to take the opportunity to warmly thank Tim for his passion, commitment and contributions to Stellantis and in defining the vision of the future electrified Ram and Dodge brands.","It has struggled with U.S. sales, which declined 1.2% last year in a market that grew 12.3%.",0.1920280575752258,"""While the company did not invest in all-new products for Dodge, Kuniskis, a salesperson and marketer, was able to grow awareness and sales of the brand's Charger, Challenger and Durango vehicles over the years.","It has struggled with U.S. sales, which declined 1.2% last year in a market that grew 12.3%.",2024-05-19 "Tesla's Chinese rival Nio launches a new brand and car that undercuts the Model Y by $4,000",https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/15/china-ev-price-wars-nios-onvo-brand-undercuts-tesla-model-y.html,2024-05-15T16:04:44+0000,"In this articleSHANGHAI — Chinese electric car company Nio revealed Wednesday that the first car for its new, lower-priced brand, Onvo, will be about $4,000 cheaper than Tesla's comparable Model Y.Deliveries for Onvo's first car, the L60 SUV, are set to begin in September, the company said. Pre-sales began after Wednesday's launch event.Nio CEO William Li said he expects Onvo to begin selling its cars overseas at some point but didn't specify when, according to an interview with CNBC's Eunice Yoon.Since launching about 10 years ago, Nio has focused on the premium segment of cars, priced around 300,000 yuan (US$41,500) or higher. The company has since expanded to Europe, but its monthly deliveries in China have generally remained modest versus the competition.Onvo's L60 starts at 219,900 yuan (US$30,439) versus the Model Y's 249,900 yuan (US$34,617). Elon Musk's electric SUV has been one of the best-selling pure battery-powered electric cars in China.Fierce competition in China's electric car market has invited new entrants and prompted many companies to cut prices.Smartphone company Xiaomi in late March entered the electric car market with its SU7 sedan to rival Tesla's Model 3 with a price that was also about $4,000 cheaper.The Model 3 has since cut its price by about $2,000 to 231,900 yuan (US$32,124), according to Tesla's China website. Xiaomi said Wednesday it had delivered 10,000 SU7 vehicles.BYD, which sold more cars than Elon Musk's automaker last year when including hybrids, mostly sells cars in the range of 100,000 yuan (US$13,851) or below. BYD has started to expand into higher-price segments in the last few years.Nio CEO Li confirmed to CNBC that the L60 is using lower-priced batteries from BYD.Global competition from Chinese electric-vehicle makers has also prompted stiff new tariffs from the Biden administration on imports of the vehicles to the U.S. Chinese EVs will be subject to a 100% tariff, the administration announced on Tuesday.When asked about the new levies, Li called them ""completely unreasonable,"" according to a CNBC translation from Mandarin to English. Li also noted the impact on consumers and climate goals.Onvo aims to set a ""new standard"" for the family car, Alan Ai, president of the Nio sub-brand, said at Wednesday's launch event in Mandarin, translated by CNBC.The brand's name stands for ""On Voyage,"" while its Chinese name ""Le Dao"" is meant to evoke a family having a happy time together.Ai made many comparisons to the Model Y and other cars during his presentation.He said the L60's interior was more spacious than that of Tesla's Model Y and Toyota's Rav4. He also said Onvo's new car had better shock absorption and cut tighter figure-eights compared with competitors.Onvo's advertised driving range on a single charge is at least as far as — or even further — than that of the Model Y depending on the version.As a sub-brand, Onvo vehicles can access many of Nio's battery swap and charging stations, Ai said.Ai also showed videos of Onvo models using driver-assist technology to navigate through country roads and city streets.Tesla's driver-assist software, Full Self-Driving, isn't available in China yet but is widely expected to be nearing Beijing's approval for rollout.",CNBC,15/05/2024,"[""In this articleSHANGHAI — Chinese electric car company Nio revealed Wednesday that the first car for its new, lower-priced brand, Onvo, will be about $4,000 cheaper than Tesla's comparable Model Y.Deliveries for Onvo's first car, the L60 SUV, are set to begin in September, the company said."", ""Pre-sales began after Wednesday's launch event."", ""Nio CEO William Li said he expects Onvo to begin selling its cars overseas at some point but didn't specify when, according to an interview with CNBC's Eunice Yoon."", 'Since launching about 10 years ago, Nio has focused on the premium segment of cars, priced around 300,000 yuan (US$41,500) or higher.', 'The company has since expanded to Europe, but its monthly deliveries in China have generally remained modest versus the competition.', ""Onvo's L60 starts at 219,900 yuan (US$30,439) versus the Model Y's 249,900 yuan (US$34,617)."", ""Elon Musk's electric SUV has been one of the best-selling pure battery-powered electric cars in China."", ""Fierce competition in China's electric car market has invited new entrants and prompted many companies to cut prices."", ""Smartphone company Xiaomi in late March entered the electric car market with its SU7 sedan to rival Tesla's Model 3 with a price that was also about $4,000 cheaper."", ""The Model 3 has since cut its price by about $2,000 to 231,900 yuan (US$32,124), according to Tesla's China website."", 'Xiaomi said Wednesday it had delivered 10,000 SU7 vehicles.', ""BYD, which sold more cars than Elon Musk's automaker last year when including hybrids, mostly sells cars in the range of 100,000 yuan (US$13,851) or below."", 'BYD has started to expand into higher-price segments in the last few years.', 'Nio CEO Li confirmed to CNBC that the L60 is using lower-priced batteries from BYD.Global competition from Chinese electric-vehicle makers has also prompted stiff new tariffs from the Biden administration on imports of the vehicles to the U.S. Chinese EVs will be subject to a 100% tariff, the administration announced on Tuesday.', 'When asked about the new levies, Li called them ""completely unreasonable,"" according to a CNBC translation from Mandarin to English.', 'Li also noted the impact on consumers and climate goals.', 'Onvo aims to set a ""new standard"" for the family car, Alan Ai, president of the Nio sub-brand, said at Wednesday\'s launch event in Mandarin, translated by CNBC.The brand\'s name stands for ""On Voyage,"" while its Chinese name ""Le Dao"" is meant to evoke a family having a happy time together.', 'Ai made many comparisons to the Model Y and other cars during his presentation.', ""He said the L60's interior was more spacious than that of Tesla's Model Y and Toyota's Rav4."", ""He also said Onvo's new car had better shock absorption and cut tighter figure-eights compared with competitors."", ""Onvo's advertised driving range on a single charge is at least as far as — or even further — than that of the Model Y depending on the version."", ""As a sub-brand, Onvo vehicles can access many of Nio's battery swap and charging stations, Ai said."", 'Ai also showed videos of Onvo models using driver-assist technology to navigate through country roads and city streets.', ""Tesla's driver-assist software, Full Self-Driving, isn't available in China yet but is widely expected to be nearing Beijing's approval for rollout.""]",0.0499672125822904,Elon Musk's electric SUV has been one of the best-selling pure battery-powered electric cars in China.,"In this articleSHANGHAI — Chinese electric car company Nio revealed Wednesday that the first car for its new, lower-priced brand, Onvo, will be about $4,000 cheaper than Tesla's comparable Model Y.Deliveries for Onvo's first car, the L60 SUV, are set to begin in September, the company said.",0.5664129389656914,He also said Onvo's new car had better shock absorption and cut tighter figure-eights compared with competitors.,"Nio CEO Li confirmed to CNBC that the L60 is using lower-priced batteries from BYD.Global competition from Chinese electric-vehicle makers has also prompted stiff new tariffs from the Biden administration on imports of the vehicles to the U.S. Chinese EVs will be subject to a 100% tariff, the administration announced on Tuesday.",2024-05-19 Universities continue to grapple with pro-Palestinian protests ahead of graduation ceremonies,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/18/business/college-graduations-pro-palestinian-protests/index.html," Published 3:07 PM EDT, Sat May 18, 2024 ","Universities across the United States have adopted a number of tactics in recent weeks to prevent disruptions by pro-Palestinian protesters at graduation ceremonies. Some universities have reached agreements with on-campus demonstrators, while others have cited safety concerns and canceled, postponed or relocated their schoolwide ceremonies. Several schools continue to grapple with pro-Palestinian protesters ahead of their spring commencement, subjecting themselves to internal scrutiny and public criticism. On Friday night, University of Pennsylvania police arrested 19 individuals, including seven students, following an attempt by pro-Palestinian demonstrators to occupy a university building, a university spokesperson told CNN Saturday. Penn Against the Occupation announced their intention to occupy Fisher-Bennet Hall in a post on the group’s Instagram Friday night, calling for people to “flood UPenn for Palestine.” The group called on the school’s administration, in part, to divest from corporations “that profit from Israel’s war on Gaza and occupation in Palestine and academically from Israel institutions, condemning the scholasticide of Palestinian scholars and universities,” according to another Instagram post. Friday’s arrests follow the arrest of at least 33 people on May 10 when law enforcement broke down a pro-Palestinian encampment erected on campus. The latest campus arrests also come just a few days before Monday’s universitywide commencement ceremony, where students and their families will be subject to additional safety procedures described as “airport-style security screening,” the university said in a safety update earlier this month. Guests and graduates will not be allowed to bring signs, posters, flags and artificial noisemakers, according to school officials. On Thursday, the Academic Senate at the University of California, Los Angeles rejected resolutions of no confidence and censure brought against Gene Block, the school’s chancellor. The resolutions were brought forward in the wake of an attack by counterprotesters on an on-campus pro-Palestinian encampment on April 30, and claimed Block “failed to ensure the safety of our students and grievously mishandled” the situation. The no-confidence resolution failed after only 43% of members voted in its favor. The resolution to censure failed to get the majority of votes required to pass by the senate. In all, 88 members voted in favor of the censure, while 88 opposed it, three abstained and 15 were present but didn’t vote. “It is clear that we are not united in how we view the major events of the past weeks and the campus response to them,” Chair Andrea M. Kasko said Friday in a statement. “I hope that we can try to find common ground as colleagues, and have the courage to listen with open minds and open hearts even when we do not agree.” Also Friday, Mildred García, the chancellor of the California State University System, announced Sonoma State University President Mike Lee would be stepping down after he sent a message “concerning an agreement with campus protesters … sent without the appropriate approvals.” The statement sent by Lee to the Sonoma State campus community on Tuesday included agreements to set up an advisory council of Students for Justice in Palestine as well as a review of the university’s vendor contracts and investments, according to a copy of the message obtained by CNN. “SSU will not pursue or engage in any study abroad programs, faculty exchanges, or other formal collaborations that are sponsored by, or represent, the Israeli state academic and research institutions,” Lee wrote, adding study abroad programs in Israel will be “terminated until further notice.” On Wednesday, García announced Lee had been placed on administrative leave for “insubordination.” In Atlanta, Morehouse College President David A. Thomas said he would shut down Sunday’s commencement ceremonies “on the spot” rather than allow police to remove student protesters during President Joe Biden’s highly anticipated graduation speech. “What we won’t allow is disruptive behavior that prevents the ceremony or services from proceeding in a manner that those in attendance can partake and enjoy,” Thomas told CNN’s Victor Blackwell in an interview Thursday. “So, for example, prolonged shouting down of the president as he speaks. I have also made a decision that we will also not ask police to take individuals out of commencement in zip ties. If faced with the choice, I will cease the ceremonies on the spot If we were to reach that position.” Biden’s presence at Morehouse, one of the nation’s preeminent historically Black colleges, comes as the president campaigns amid weak polling among young voters, even as many have expressed frustration with his administration’s continued support of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza. Biden has been confronted by some protests during his own speeches and campaign events. On January 23, his campaign speech on abortion rights at George Mason University in Virginia was interrupted more than a dozen times over his administration’s support of Israel. Biden is expected to deliver a commencement address at the United States Military Academy at West Point on May 25.",CNN,18/05/2024,"['Universities across the United States have adopted a number of tactics in recent weeks to prevent disruptions by pro-Palestinian protesters at graduation ceremonies.', 'Some universities have reached agreements with on-campus demonstrators, while others have cited safety concerns and canceled, postponed or relocated their schoolwide ceremonies.', 'Several schools continue to grapple with pro-Palestinian protesters ahead of their spring commencement, subjecting themselves to internal scrutiny and public criticism.', 'On Friday night, University of Pennsylvania police arrested 19 individuals, including seven students, following an attempt by pro-Palestinian demonstrators to occupy a university building, auniversity spokesperson told CNN Saturday.', 'Penn Against the Occupation announced their intention to occupy Fisher-Bennet Hall ina post on the group’s InstagramFriday night, calling for people to “flood UPenn for Palestine.”', 'The group called on the school’s administration, in part, to divest from corporations “that profit from Israel’s war on Gaza and occupation in Palestine and academically from Israel institutions, condemning the scholasticide of Palestinian scholars and universities,” according to another Instagram post.', 'Friday’s arrests followthe arrest of at least 33 peopleon May 10 when law enforcement broke down a pro-Palestinian encampment erected on campus.', 'The latest campus arrests also come just a few days before Monday’s universitywide commencement ceremony, where students and their families will be subject to additional safety proceduresdescribed as“airport-style security screening,” the university said in a safety update earlier this month.', 'Guests and graduateswill not be allowedto bring signs, posters, flags and artificial noisemakers, according to school officials.', 'On Thursday, the Academic Senate at the University of California, Los Angeles rejected resolutions of no confidence and censure brought against Gene Block, the school’s chancellor.', 'The resolutions were brought forward in thewake of an attack by counterprotesterson an on-campus pro-Palestinian encampment on April 30, and claimed Block “failed to ensure the safety of our students and grievously mishandled” the situation.', 'The no-confidence resolution failed after only 43% of members voted in its favor.', 'The resolution to censure failed to get the majority of votes required to pass by the senate.', 'In all, 88 members voted in favor of the censure, while 88 opposed it, three abstained and 15 were present but didn’t vote.', '“It is clear that we are not united in how we view the major events of the past weeks and the campus response to them,” Chair Andrea M. Kasko said Friday in a statement. “', 'I hope that we can try to find common ground as colleagues, and have the courage to listen with open minds and open hearts even when we do not agree.”', 'Also Friday, Mildred García, the chancellor of the California State University System, announced Sonoma State University President Mike Lee would be stepping down after he sent a message “concerning an agreement with campus protesters … sent without the appropriate approvals.”', 'The statement sent by Lee to the Sonoma State campus community on Tuesday included agreements to set up an advisory council of Students for Justice in Palestine as well as a review of the university’s vendor contracts and investments, according to a copy of the message obtained by CNN.', '“SSU will not pursue or engage in any study abroad programs, faculty exchanges, or other formal collaborations that are sponsored by, or represent, the Israeli state academic and research institutions,” Lee wrote, adding study abroad programs in Israel will be “terminated until further notice.”', 'On Wednesday, García announced Lee had been placed on administrative leave for “insubordination.”', 'In Atlanta, Morehouse College President David A. Thomas said he would shut down Sunday’s commencement ceremonies “on the spot” rather than allow police to remove student protesters during President Joe Biden’s highly anticipated graduation speech.', '“What we won’t allow is disruptive behavior that prevents the ceremony or services from proceeding in a manner that those in attendance can partake and enjoy,” Thomas told CNN’s Victor Blackwell in an interview Thursday.', '“So, for example, prolonged shouting down of the president as he speaks.', 'I have also made a decision that we will also not ask police to take individuals out of commencement in zip ties.', 'If faced with the choice, I will cease the ceremonies on the spot If we were to reach that position.”', 'Biden’s presence at Morehouse, one of the nation’s preeminent historically Black colleges, comes as the president campaigns amid weak polling among young voters, even as many have expressed frustration with his administration’s continued support of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.', 'Biden has beenconfronted by some protestsduring his own speeches and campaign events.', 'On January 23, his campaign speech on abortion rights at George Mason University in Virginia was interruptedmore than a dozentimes over his administration’s support of Israel.', 'Biden is expected to deliver a commencement address at the United States Military Academy at West Point on May 25.']",-0.0088624052649684,"The statement sent by Lee to the Sonoma State campus community on Tuesday included agreements to set up an advisory council of Students for Justice in Palestine as well as a review of the university’s vendor contracts and investments, according to a copy of the message obtained by CNN.",Friday’s arrests followthe arrest of at least 33 peopleon May 10 when law enforcement broke down a pro-Palestinian encampment erected on campus.,-0.6151451894215175,"Some universities have reached agreements with on-campus demonstrators, while others have cited safety concerns and canceled, postponed or relocated their schoolwide ceremonies.","Biden’s presence at Morehouse, one of the nation’s preeminent historically Black colleges, comes as the president campaigns amid weak polling among young voters, even as many have expressed frustration with his administration’s continued support of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.",2024-05-19 They claim AI stole their voices. Now they’re suing,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/tech/voice-actors-ai-lawsuit-lovo/index.html," Updated 3:10 PM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","Voice actor Paul Skye Lehrman took a job in 2020 for which he believed he was providing a set of one-off voice samples. Years later, he says he heard his voice narrating a YouTube video and then on a podcast — even though he had never recorded either of them. Now, Lehrman, along with fellow voice actor Linnea Sage, is suing AI firm Lovo for allegedly commissioning them for voice projects under false pretenses in order to create and sell AI-generated versions of their voices. The Berkeley, California based tech company advertises AI-generated voice technology to be used in marketing, education and product demos. Lehrman and Sage are suing Lovo and seeking class action status to include other people “whose voices and/or identities were stolen and used,” according to the complaint filed Thursday in the Southern District Court of New York. The complaint was first reported by the New York Times. The voice actors’ lawsuit is just the latest in a recent string of legal actions brought against various tech companies by creatives, writers and artists who say their work was used without their permission to train AI systems that could ultimately compete with them. Such lawsuits have added to a growing wave of concerns over how the training of AI models, which requires huge swaths of data, could run afoul of copyright and intellectual property laws. “Implicit in LOVO’s offerings to its customers is that each voice-over actor has agreed to LOVO’s terms and conditions for customers to be able to access that actor’s voice,” the complaint states. But for Lehrman and Sage and any others “who have not agreed to LOVO’s terms, the continued unauthorized use of Plaintiffs’ voices is theft of service and misappropriation.” Lovo did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the lawsuit. In May 2020, Lehrman says he received a request for voice-over narrative services on the gig work website Fiverr from an account called “User25199087.” When he asked what the voice sample was for, he was told it would be used “for academic research purposes only” and that “the scripts would not be used for anything else,” according to the complaint. He was paid $1,200 for the job, the complaint states. Two years later, Lehrman came across a YouTube video that sounded as if it had his voice narrating it, although he’d never been involved in its creation, the complaint states. Then in June 2023, Lehrman claims he heard his voice being used on a podcast about the dangers of AI technologies. Similarly, Sage was offered a job on Fiverr in 2019 producing “test scripts for radio ads” that she was told would “not be disclosed externally,” according to the complaint. She was paid $400. Sage says she later also discovered her voice in a YouTube video: a recording of a Lovo investor presentation demonstrating its technology. Lehrman and Sage allege that the people who contacted them on Fiverr were Lovo employees who misrepresented what their voice samples would be used for and later sold or raised money on the back of the AI-version of their voices. “To be clear, the product that customers purchase from LOVO is stolen property. They are voices stolen by LOVO and marketed by LOVO under false pretenses,” the complaint states. The actors are seeking more than $5 million in damages, as well as a court order blocking Lovo from continuing the alleged use of their voices.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['Voice actor Paul Skye Lehrman took a job in 2020 for which he believed he was providing a set of one-off voice samples.', 'Years later, he says he heard his voice narrating a YouTube video and then on a podcast — even though he had never recorded either of them.', 'Now, Lehrman, along with fellow voice actor Linnea Sage, is suing AI firm Lovo for allegedly commissioning them for voice projects under false pretenses in order to create and sell AI-generated versions of their voices.', 'The Berkeley, California based tech company advertises AI-generated voice technology to be used in marketing, education and product demos.', 'Lehrman and Sage are suing Lovo and seeking class action status to include other people “whose voices and/or identities were stolen and used,” according to the complaint filed Thursday in the Southern District Court of New York.', 'The complaint was first reported by the New York Times.', 'The voice actors’ lawsuit is just the latest in a recent string of legal actions brought against various tech companies by creatives, writers and artists who say their work was used without their permission to train AI systems that could ultimately compete with them.', 'Such lawsuits have added to a growing wave of concerns over how the training of AI models, which requires huge swaths of data, could run afoul of copyright and intellectual property laws.', '“Implicit in LOVO’s offerings to its customers is that each voice-over actor has agreed to LOVO’s terms and conditions for customers to be able to access that actor’s voice,” the complaint states.', 'But for Lehrman and Sage and any others “who have not agreed to LOVO’s terms, the continued unauthorized use of Plaintiffs’ voices is theft of service and misappropriation.”', 'Lovo did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the lawsuit.', 'In May 2020, Lehrman says he received a request for voice-over narrative services on the gig work website Fiverr from an account called “User25199087.”', 'When he asked what the voice sample was for, he was told it would be used “for academic research purposes only” and that “the scripts would not be used for anything else,” according to the complaint.', 'He was paid $1,200 for the job, the complaint states.', 'Two years later, Lehrman came across a YouTube video that sounded as if it had his voice narrating it, although he’d never been involved in its creation, the complaint states.', 'Then in June 2023, Lehrman claims he heard his voice being used on a podcast about the dangers of AI technologies.', 'Similarly, Sage was offered a job on Fiverr in 2019 producing “test scripts for radio ads” that she was told would “not be disclosed externally,” according to the complaint.', 'She was paid $400.', 'Sage says she later also discovered her voice in a YouTube video: a recording of a Lovo investor presentation demonstrating its technology.', 'Lehrman and Sage allege that the people who contacted them on Fiverr were Lovo employees who misrepresented what their voice samples would be used for and later sold or raised money on the back of the AI-version of their voices.', '“To be clear, the product that customers purchase from LOVO is stolen property.', 'They are voices stolen by LOVO and marketed by LOVO under false pretenses,” the complaint states.', 'The actors are seeking more than $5 million in damages, as well as a court order blocking Lovo from continuing the alleged use of their voices.']",-0.1637325376949189,"Such lawsuits have added to a growing wave of concerns over how the training of AI models, which requires huge swaths of data, could run afoul of copyright and intellectual property laws.","Lehrman and Sage are suing Lovo and seeking class action status to include other people “whose voices and/or identities were stolen and used,” according to the complaint filed Thursday in the Southern District Court of New York.",-0.8929615914821625,,"Such lawsuits have added to a growing wave of concerns over how the training of AI models, which requires huge swaths of data, could run afoul of copyright and intellectual property laws.",2024-05-19 "Minnesota lawmakers strike minimum pay deal for Uber, Lyft drivers",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/19/business/uber-lyft-drivers-pay-minnesota/index.html," Published 1:46 PM EDT, Sun May 19, 2024 ","Minnesota government officials have struck a deal with rideshare companies Uber and Lyft to set minimum wage standards for drivers, lawmakers announced Saturday night. The agreement is the culmination of nearly a year of back and forth between Democratic state officials and the two companies, who threatened to withdraw their businesses from Minnesota over a proposed Minneapolis ordinance that would grant rideshare drivers increased worker protections. The ordinance, initially adopted in August 2023, was part of a larger effort to grant more comprehensive benefits to contract workers, who take freelance work at digital platforms like DoorDash, Instacart, Uber and Lyft. It mandated drivers be paid at least $1.40 per mile and $0.51 per minute. The rule was delayed after Lyft and Uber warned they would leave Minneapolis. State lawmakers have been focused on compromising with the companies before a July 1 deadline. Under the new agreement, the statewide minimum wage rate for rideshare drivers will be $1.28 per mile and $0.31 per minute. The rule will override the higher rate the Minneapolis City Council had initially proposed. “When you take it as a blended rate, that results in a 20% increase in pay for drivers in the state of Minnesota,” the state’s Democratic House Majority Leader Jamie Long told reporters Saturday night. The bill also includes the “strongest insurance provision for drivers in the entire country,” Long added. “It was a hard-fought compromise,” said Democratic Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy, acknowledging negotiations over pay had to toe the line between addressing the needs of employees and the need of Minnesotans who rely on rideshare services for transportation. “We applaud the tens of thousands of riders & drivers who sent close to 100,000 emails to legislators — your voices were heard. While the coming price increases may hurt riders and drivers alike, we will be able to continue to operate across the State under the compromise brokered by the Governor,” Uber’s policy director Josh Gold said in a statement. Lyft has not responded to CNN’s request for comment.",CNN,19/05/2024,"['Minnesota government officials have struck a deal with rideshare companies Uber and Lyft to set minimum wage standards for drivers, lawmakers announced Saturday night.', 'The agreement is the culmination of nearly a year of back and forth between Democratic state officials and the two companies, who threatened to withdraw their businesses from Minnesota over a proposed Minneapolis ordinance that would grant rideshare drivers increased worker protections.', 'The ordinance, initially adopted in August 2023, was part of a larger effort to grant more comprehensive benefits to contract workers, who take freelance work at digital platforms like DoorDash, Instacart, Uber and Lyft.', 'It mandated drivers be paid at least $1.40 per mile and $0.51 per minute.', 'The rule was delayed after Lyft and Uber warned they would leave Minneapolis.', 'State lawmakers have been focused on compromising with the companies before a July 1 deadline.', 'Under the new agreement, the statewide minimum wage rate for rideshare drivers will be $1.28 per mile and $0.31 per minute.', 'The rule will override the higher rate the Minneapolis City Council had initially proposed.', '“When you take it as a blended rate, that results in a 20% increase in pay for drivers in the state of Minnesota,” the state’s Democratic House Majority Leader Jamie Long told reporters Saturday night.', 'The bill also includes the “strongest insurance provision for drivers in the entire country,” Long added.', '“It was a hard-fought compromise,” said Democratic Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy, acknowledging negotiations over pay had to toe the line between addressing the needs of employees and the need of Minnesotans who rely on rideshare services for transportation.', '“We applaud the tens of thousands of riders & drivers who sent close to 100,000 emails to legislators — your voices were heard.', 'While the coming price increases may hurt riders and drivers alike, we will be able to continue to operate across the State under the compromise brokered by the Governor,” Uber’s policy director Josh Gold said in a statement.', 'Lyft has not responded to CNN’s request for comment.']",0.1198446285366897,"The ordinance, initially adopted in August 2023, was part of a larger effort to grant more comprehensive benefits to contract workers, who take freelance work at digital platforms like DoorDash, Instacart, Uber and Lyft.",The rule was delayed after Lyft and Uber warned they would leave Minneapolis.,0.929633229970932,"Minnesota government officials have struck a deal with rideshare companies Uber and Lyft to set minimum wage standards for drivers, lawmakers announced Saturday night.",,2024-05-19 "TikTok’s new suitor is former Dodgers owner Frank McCourt, as another lawsuit pushes back against ban",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/15/tech/tiktok-frank-mccourt-bid-creator-lawsuit/index.html," Published 10:19 AM EDT, Wed May 15, 2024 ","Another wealthy investor says he’s organizing a bid to purchase TikTok, after President Joe Biden signed a law last month forcing TikTok to find a new owner or be banned in the United States. Frank McCourt, a real estate billionaire and the former owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers, said Wednesday he is laying the groundwork to acquire TikTok as part of a broad initiative to make a healthier internet. McCourt, who has spent years accusing technology giants of exploiting their users and undermining the internet’s original open vision, did not disclose how much he aims to spend on TikTok or how much he believes the platform is worth. Nor did he address how he plans to deal with the Chinese government’s expected opposition to a forced sale, which would likely trigger export controls China has imposed on TikTok’s secretive recommendation algorithm. Still, McCourt said, the potential opportunity to acquire TikTok is a chance to rewire how social media works. Under McCourt’s proposal, TikTok would operate on an open-source, decentralized protocol where users control their own data no matter what social media app they use. “We can, and must, do more to safeguard the health and well-being of our children, families, democracy and society,” McCourt said in a statement. “We believe we can preserve — and enhance — the TikTok experience by giving individuals and creators on the platform the value and control they deserve regarding who has access to their data and how it is used.” McCourt said he is working with the investment firm Guggenheim Securities and the law firm Kirkland & Ellis to help assemble the bid, adding that the push is backed by Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web. McCourt joins a host of other would-be suitors angling to pick up a platform used by 170 million Americans. Former Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin announced in March he’s assembling a bid, as well as Kevin O’Leary, the Canadian chairman of the private venture capital firm O’Leary Ventures. TikTok, meanwhile, has indicated that it’s not for sale and the company has instead begun to mount a fight against the new law. The company sued to block the law earlier this month, saying that spinning off from its Chinese parent company is not feasible and that the legislation would lead to a ban of the app in the United States starting in January of next year. TikTok’s lawsuit claims the US government “has taken the unprecedented step of expressly singling out and banning” the short-form video app in an unconstitutional exercise of congressional power that would affect both the platform and its American users. A group of eight TikTok creators on Tuesday also filed a separate lawsuit challenging the potential ban. Their suit calls the law an “extraordinary restraint on speech that violates the First Amendment” and alleged that the law “promises to shutter a discrete medium of communication that has become part of American life.” The group includes a college football coach; a rancher and former US marine; and a small business owner who runs a line of skincare products, among others, who collectively claim approximately 14 million followers on TikTok. Several of the creators claim they could lose money earned through TikTok’s Creator Fund or by promoting their small businesses if the app were banned, and that their attempts to use other platforms have proven less fruitful. “As Americans, we should be able to pick whatever apps we use and the government shouldn’t have the power to take that freedom away from us haphazardly,” one of the creators involved in the suit, Topher Townsend, said in a statement. “TikTok contributes significantly to my income and allowed the opportunity to be a full-time creator for almost four years now … This (new law) is being driven by larger politics, but the end result is going to harm a lot of people, including me.” TikTok declined to comment on the creator lawsuit. The US Department of Justice did not immediately respond to a request for comment.",CNN,15/05/2024,"['Another wealthy investor says he’s organizing a bid to purchase TikTok, after President Joe Biden signed a law last month forcing TikTok to find a new owner or be banned in the United States.', 'Frank McCourt, a real estate billionaire and the former owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers, said Wednesday he is laying the groundwork to acquire TikTok as part of a broad initiative to make a healthier internet.', 'McCourt, who has spent years accusing technology giants of exploiting their users and undermining the internet’s original open vision, did not disclose how much he aims to spend on TikTok or how much he believes the platform is worth.', 'Nor did he address how he plans to deal with the Chinese government’s expected opposition to a forced sale, which would likely trigger export controls China has imposed on TikTok’ssecretive recommendation algorithm.', 'Still, McCourt said, the potential opportunity to acquire TikTok is a chance to rewire how social media works.', 'Under McCourt’s proposal, TikTok would operate on an open-source, decentralized protocol where users control their own data no matter what social media app they use.', '“We can, and must, do more to safeguard the health and well-being of our children, families, democracy and society,” McCourt said in a statement. “', 'We believe we can preserve — and enhance — the TikTok experience by giving individuals and creators on the platform the value and control they deserve regarding who has access to their data and how it is used.”', 'McCourt said he is working with the investment firm Guggenheim Securities and the law firm Kirkland & Ellis to help assemble the bid, adding that the push is backed by Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web.', 'McCourt joins a host of other would-be suitors angling to pick up a platform used by 170 million Americans.', 'Former Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin announced in March he’s assembling a bid, as well as Kevin O’Leary, the Canadian chairman of the private venture capital firm O’Leary Ventures.', 'TikTok, meanwhile, has indicated that it’s not for sale and the company has instead begun to mount a fight against the new law.', 'The company sued to block the law earlier this month, saying that spinning off from its Chinese parent company is not feasible and that the legislation would lead to a ban of the app in the United States starting in January of next year.', 'TikTok’s lawsuit claimsthe US government “has taken the unprecedented step of expressly singling out and banning” the short-form video app in an unconstitutional exercise of congressional power that would affect both the platform and its American users.', 'A group of eight TikTok creators on Tuesday also filed a separate lawsuit challenging the potential ban.', 'Their suit calls the law an “extraordinary restraint on speech that violates the First Amendment” and alleged that the law “promises to shutter a discrete medium of communication that has become part of American life.”', 'The group includes a college football coach; a rancher and former US marine; and a small business owner who runs a line of skincare products, among others, who collectively claim approximately 14 million followers on TikTok.', 'Several of the creators claim they could lose money earned through TikTok’s Creator Fund or by promoting their small businesses if the app were banned, and that their attempts to use other platforms have proven less fruitful.', '“As Americans, we should be able to pick whatever apps we use and the government shouldn’t have the power to take that freedom away from us haphazardly,” one of the creators involved in the suit, Topher Townsend, said in a statement. “', 'TikTok contributes significantly to my income and allowed the opportunity to be a full-time creator for almost four years now … This (new law) is being driven by larger politics, but the end result is going to harm a lot of people, including me.”', 'TikTok declined to comment on the creator lawsuit.', 'The US Department of Justice did not immediately respond to a request for comment.']",0.0016212743492224,"“As Americans, we should be able to pick whatever apps we use and the government shouldn’t have the power to take that freedom away from us haphazardly,” one of the creators involved in the suit, Topher Townsend, said in a statement. “",A group of eight TikTok creators on Tuesday also filed a separate lawsuit challenging the potential ban.,-0.1393562912940979,"TikTok contributes significantly to my income and allowed the opportunity to be a full-time creator for almost four years now … This (new law) is being driven by larger politics, but the end result is going to harm a lot of people, including me.”","Several of the creators claim they could lose money earned through TikTok’s Creator Fund or by promoting their small businesses if the app were banned, and that their attempts to use other platforms have proven less fruitful.",2024-05-19 Microsoft stock hits all-time high after hiring former OpenAI CEO Sam Altman,https://edition.cnn.com/2023/11/20/investing/microsoft-stock-record-high-altman-openai/index.html," Updated 4:19 PM EST, Mon November 20, 2023 ","Microsoft stock reached a record high on Monday after the company said that Sam Altman, former chief executive of OpenAI, will join the company to head its artificial intelligence innovation leg. Shares of the tech behemoth rose 2.1% to an all-time high close of $377.44 on Monday, beating the previous record of $376.17. That comes after shares of Microsoft fell 1.7% on Friday, when Sam Altman was ousted from his position at OpenAI in a boardroom coup. Microsoft is the artificial intelligence firm’s biggest stakeholder, with a $13 billion investment in the company. Greg Brockman, who co-founded OpenAI and quit after Altman’s firing, is also joining Microsoft. Altman’s hiring ended days of speculation that the former chief executive could return to the firm after his dramatic firing. Emmett Shear, former CEO of Amazon-owned streaming service Twitch, will replace OpenAI chief technology officer Mira Murati as interim chief executive. Microsoft shares are up about 56% for the year. The stock is one of the “Magnificent Seven” that have powered the lion’s share of the market’s returns this year, boosted by Wall Street’s bet that artificial intelligence is the next big thing in tech. Dan Ives, tech analyst at Wedbush Securities, reiterated his $425 price target for Microsoft’s stock following Altman’s and Brockman’s hires. “We view Microsoft now even in a stronger position from an AI perspective with Altman and Brockman” at the company, Ives wrote in a note on Monday. Other members of the “Magnificent Seven” saw a boost on Monday. Nvidia shares gained 2.3% to end the trading session at $504.20 ahead of its earnings due on Tuesday, notching a record-high close for the chipmaker.",CNN,20/11/2023,"['Microsoft stock reached a record high on Monday after the company said that Sam Altman, former chief executive of OpenAI, will join the company to head its artificial intelligence innovation leg.', 'Shares of the tech behemoth rose 2.1% to an all-time high close of $377.44 on Monday, beating the previous record of $376.17.', 'That comes after shares of Microsoft fell 1.7% on Friday, when Sam Altman was ousted from his position at OpenAI in a boardroom coup.', 'Microsoft is the artificial intelligence firm’s biggest stakeholder, with a $13 billion investment in the company.', 'Greg Brockman, who co-founded OpenAI and quit after Altman’s firing, is also joining Microsoft.', 'Altman’s hiring ended days of speculation that the former chief executive could return to the firm after his dramatic firing.', 'Emmett Shear, former CEO of Amazon-owned streaming service Twitch, will replace OpenAI chief technology officer Mira Murati as interim chief executive.', 'Microsoft shares are up about 56% for the year.', 'The stock is one of the “Magnificent Seven” that have powered the lion’s share of the market’s returns this year, boosted by Wall Street’s bet that artificial intelligence is the next big thing in tech.', 'Dan Ives, tech analyst at Wedbush Securities, reiterated his $425 price target for Microsoft’s stock following Altman’s and Brockman’s hires.', '“We view Microsoft now even in a stronger position from an AI perspective with Altman and Brockman” at the company, Ives wrote in a note on Monday.', 'Other members of the “Magnificent Seven” saw a boost on Monday.', 'Nvidia shares gained 2.3% to end the trading session at $504.20 ahead of its earnings due on Tuesday, notching a record-high close for the chipmaker.']",0.3148943375907157,"The stock is one of the “Magnificent Seven” that have powered the lion’s share of the market’s returns this year, boosted by Wall Street’s bet that artificial intelligence is the next big thing in tech.","Greg Brockman, who co-founded OpenAI and quit after Altman’s firing, is also joining Microsoft.",0.7688216765721639,Microsoft shares are up about 56% for the year.,"That comes after shares of Microsoft fell 1.7% on Friday, when Sam Altman was ousted from his position at OpenAI in a boardroom coup.",2024-05-19 Grocery prices are finally falling,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/15/business/grocery-prices-april/index.html," Updated 12:06 PM EDT, Wed May 15, 2024 ","Food shoppers can finally breathe a slight sigh of relief: After years of increases followed by months of plateau, grocery prices fell last month. Grocery prices retreated 0.2% from March to April, adjusted for seasonal swings, according to inflation data released Wednesday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. But on the other end, food prices at restaurants rose 0.3% in that period. Food prices overall were flat as a result. The dip, while small, is a welcome reversal. Grocery prices began soaring at the start of the pandemic, far outpacing overall inflation for years as supply chains snarled, the war in Ukraine affected global crop exports, extreme weather damaged yields and corporations took an opportunity to pad prices. But back in February, overall food prices remained flat for the first time since April 2023. And now they’ve actually gone down, even if only slightly. Still, grocery prices are higher than they were a year ago. In the 12 months through April, prices rose 1.1%. But overall inflation for that period was higher, up 3.4%. In that year-long period, a number of individual items got cheaper: Ham fell 3.4%, cheese dropped 3.3% and fish and seafood, along with potatoes, decreased 2.1%. Coffee prices went down 2%. Milk slipped 1.2%, and rice ticked down 1%. Two items saw notable drops: Apples, in the wake of a supply glut last year, plunged 12.7%. And eggs, last year the poster child for rising prices, were down 9%, continuing a more recent downward trend. Still, some items got more expensive over the course of the year, particularly beef, due in part to a constrained supply of cattle exacerbated by deadly wildfires in Texas. Uncooked beef roasts spiked 10.1%. And summer grilling season staples shot up as well, with hot dogs rising 7.1%, uncooked beef steaks up 6.5%, and uncooked ground beef rising by 6%. Elsewhere in the grocery store, flour rose 2.5% and fruits and vegetables together inched up 1.7%. From March to April, several grocery items got cheaper. In that month, eggs plunged 7.3% and apples fell 2.7%. Overall, fresh fruits and vegetables declined 1.1%. Milk fell 0.8% and poultry fell 0.6%. But some items got more expensive: Breakfast sausage jumped 3.4%, flour went up 3.2%, ham jumped 1.8% and bacon rose 0.8%. While grocery prices have been moderating, menu prices remain high, especially at fast food spots. In the year through April, prices at restaurants rose 4.1%. At sit-down restaurants, prices went up 3.4%, while at limited-service restaurants — where you’re served at the counter — prices rose 4.8%. After years of rising menu prices, customers have started to pull back, visiting chains less often and spending less when they do. McDonald’s once boasted that customers didn’t flinch at higher prices, but has recently reported that it is struggling with lower-income customers. Casual dining chains are attempting to capitalize on the frustration. Applebee’s and Chili’s are trying to lure customers away from fast food spots by pointing out that it can now cost about the same to get lunch at McDonald’s as it does to order a slower burger.",CNN,15/05/2024,"['Food shoppers can finally breathe a slight sigh of relief: After years of increases followed by months of plateau, grocery prices fell last month.', 'Grocery prices retreated 0.2% from March to April, adjusted for seasonal swings, according to inflation data released Wednesday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.', 'But on the other end, food prices at restaurants rose 0.3% in that period.', 'Food prices overall were flat as a result.', 'The dip, while small, is a welcome reversal.', 'Grocery prices began soaring at the start of the pandemic, far outpacing overall inflation for years as supply chains snarled, the war in Ukraine affected global crop exports, extreme weather damaged yields and corporations took an opportunity to pad prices.', 'But back in February, overall food prices remained flat for the first time since April 2023.', 'And now they’ve actually gone down, even if only slightly.', 'Still, grocery prices are higher than they were a year ago.', 'In the 12 months through April, prices rose 1.1%.', 'But overall inflation for that period was higher, up 3.4%.', 'In that year-long period, a number of individual items got cheaper: Ham fell 3.4%, cheese dropped 3.3% and fish and seafood, along with potatoes, decreased 2.1%.', 'Coffee prices went down 2%.', 'Milk slipped 1.2%, and rice ticked down 1%.', 'Two items saw notable drops: Apples, in the wake of a supply glut last year, plunged 12.7%.', 'And eggs, last year the poster child for rising prices, were down 9%, continuing a more recent downward trend.', 'Still, some items got more expensive over the course of the year, particularly beef, due in part to a constrained supply of cattle exacerbated by deadly wildfires in Texas.', 'Uncooked beef roasts spiked 10.1%.', 'And summer grilling season staples shot up as well, with hot dogs rising 7.1%, uncooked beef steaks up 6.5%, and uncooked ground beef rising by 6%.', 'Elsewhere in the grocery store, flour rose 2.5% and fruits and vegetables together inched up 1.7%.', 'From March to April, several grocery items got cheaper.', 'In that month, eggs plunged 7.3% and apples fell 2.7%.', 'Overall, fresh fruits and vegetables declined 1.1%.', 'Milk fell 0.8% and poultry fell 0.6%.', 'But some items got more expensive: Breakfast sausage jumped 3.4%, flour went up 3.2%, ham jumped 1.8% and bacon rose 0.8%.', 'While grocery prices have been moderating, menu prices remain high, especially at fast food spots.', 'In the year through April, prices at restaurants rose 4.1%.', 'At sit-down restaurants, prices went up 3.4%, while at limited-service restaurants — where you’re served at the counter —prices rose 4.8%.', 'After years of rising menu prices, customers have started to pull back, visiting chains less often and spending less when they do.', 'McDonald’s once boasted that customers didn’t flinch at higher prices, but has recently reported that it is struggling with lower-income customers.', 'Casual dining chains are attempting to capitalize on the frustration.', 'Applebee’s and Chili’s are trying to lure customers away from fast food spots by pointing out that it can now cost about the same to get lunch at McDonald’s as it does to order a slower burger.']",-0.0317566096180663,"The dip, while small, is a welcome reversal.","McDonald’s once boasted that customers didn’t flinch at higher prices, but has recently reported that it is struggling with lower-income customers.",0.1184743624180555,"But overall inflation for that period was higher, up 3.4%.","Two items saw notable drops: Apples, in the wake of a supply glut last year, plunged 12.7%.",2024-05-19 Justice Department says Boeing breached 2021 agreement that shielded it from criminal charges over 737 Max crashes,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/14/justice-department-says-boeing-breached-2021-agreement-that-shielded-it-from-criminal-charges-over-737-max-crashes.html,2024-05-14T23:43:03+0000,"In this articleBoeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected it from criminal charges tied to the fatal 737 Max crashes, opening the company up to potential U.S. prosecution, the Department of Justice said Tuesday.Federal prosecutors said in a court filing in Texas they are still determining ""how it will proceed in this matter"" and that Boeing will have 30 days to respond.The airplane manufacturer broke the agreement by ""failing to design, implement, and enforce a compliance and ethics program to prevent and detect violations of the U.S. fraud laws throughout its operations,"" the DOJ said.Boeing denied those claims.""We believe that we have honored the terms of that agreement, and look forward to the opportunity to respond to the Department on this issue,"" Boeing said.In January 2021, Boeing agreed to pay $2.5 billion to settle a conspiracy charge with the Justice Department. After a roughly two-year probe, the DOJ accused the company of concealing information about its Max plane that had been involved in two crashes that claimed the lives of all 346 people on board.Boeing had admitted that two of its 737 Max technical pilots ""deceived"" the Federal Aviation Administration about the capabilities of a flight-control system on the planes that was later implicated in the two crashes, the Justice Department said at the time.""This is a positive first step, and for the families, a long time coming. But we need to see further action from DOJ to hold Boeing accountable, and plan to use our meeting on May 31 to explain in more detail what we believe would be a satisfactory remedy to Boeing's ongoing criminal conduct,"" Paul Cassell, a lawyer for crash victims' families said in a statement on Tuesday.The plane-maker has been under heightened federal scrutiny after a door panel blew out midair from a 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines on Jan. 5. A preliminary investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board said bolts that hold in the door plug, which fills an optional emergency exit, didn't appear to be in place.The near-tragedy has created a fresh crisis for Boeing, just as it was trying to stabilize its production and improve its reputation after the 2018 and 2019 crashes.",CNBC,14/05/2024,"['In this articleBoeing violated a 2021 settlement that protected it from criminal charges tied to the fatal 737 Max crashes, opening the company up to potential U.S. prosecution, the Department of Justice said Tuesday.', 'Federal prosecutors said in a court filing in Texas they are still determining ""how it will proceed in this matter"" and that Boeing will have 30 days to respond.', 'The airplane manufacturer broke the agreement by ""failing to design, implement, and enforce a compliance and ethics program to prevent and detect violations of the U.S. fraud laws throughout its operations,"" the DOJ said.', 'Boeing denied those claims.', '""We believe that we have honored the terms of that agreement, and look forward to the opportunity to respond to the Department on this issue,"" Boeing said.', 'In January 2021, Boeing agreed to pay $2.5 billion to settle a conspiracy charge with the Justice Department.', 'After a roughly two-year probe, the DOJ accused the company of concealing information about its Max plane that had been involved in two crashes that claimed the lives of all 346 people on board.', 'Boeing had admitted that two of its 737 Max technical pilots ""deceived"" the Federal Aviation Administration about the capabilities of a flight-control system on the planes that was later implicated in the two crashes, the Justice Department said at the time.', '""This is a positive first step, and for the families, a long time coming.', 'But we need to see further action from DOJ to hold Boeing accountable, and plan to use our meeting on May 31 to explain in more detail what we believe would be a satisfactory remedy to Boeing\'s ongoing criminal conduct,"" Paul Cassell, a lawyer for crash victims\' families said in a statement on Tuesday.', 'The plane-maker has been under heightened federal scrutiny after a door panel blew out midair from a 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines on Jan. 5.', ""A preliminary investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board said bolts that hold in the door plug, which fills an optional emergency exit, didn't appear to be in place."", 'The near-tragedy has created a fresh crisis for Boeing, just as it was trying to stabilize its production and improve its reputation after the 2018 and 2019 crashes.']",-0.1461397537016413,"""We believe that we have honored the terms of that agreement, and look forward to the opportunity to respond to the Department on this issue,"" Boeing said.","The airplane manufacturer broke the agreement by ""failing to design, implement, and enforce a compliance and ethics program to prevent and detect violations of the U.S. fraud laws throughout its operations,"" the DOJ said.",0.1171628104315863,"""This is a positive first step, and for the families, a long time coming.","The near-tragedy has created a fresh crisis for Boeing, just as it was trying to stabilize its production and improve its reputation after the 2018 and 2019 crashes.",2024-05-19 McDonald's $5 value meal is coming in June — and staying for just a month,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/15/mcdonalds-5-value-meal-starts-june-25-last-about-a-month.html,2024-05-15T19:00:13+0000,"In this articleMcDonald's is set to offer a $5 value meal in the U.S., but only for a limited time.The promotion will include four items for $5 — a McChicken or McDouble, four-piece chicken nuggets, fries and a drink — and will run for roughly a month, beginning on June 25, according to a person familiar with the offering who was not authorized to speak about it publicly.""We know how much it means to our customers when McDonald's offers meaningful value and communicates it through national advertising. That's been true since our very beginning and never more important than it is today,"" McDonald's said in a statement to CNBC.CNBC last week reported the fast-food giant was working to bring a value offering to menus, with details being discussed and voted on by franchisees. An initial proposal for the meal did not clear necessary hurdles.Coca-Cola added marketing funds to the equation to make the deal more appealing, CNBC reported Friday. In a statement on Wednesday, Coca-Cola said: ""We routinely partner with our customers on marketing programs to meet consumer needs. This helps us grow our businesses together.""Financial terms of that partnership were not disclosed.The monthlong promotion comes at a time when restaurants are finally beginning to feel a long-anticipated consumer pullback.McDonald's recently reported a mixed first quarter, with U.S. same-store sales slightly missing expectations. Higher prices helped grow average checks, but some consumers pulled back as a result of the steeper costs.""Consumers continue to be even more discriminating with every dollar that they spend as they faced elevated prices in their day-to-day spending, which is putting pressure on the [quick-service restaurant] industry,"" CEO Chris Kempczinski said on the company's earnings call on April 30.He added McDonald's has to be ""laser-focused"" on affordability to attract diners.""Great value and affordability have always been a hallmark of McDonald's brand, and all three legs of the stool are coming together to deliver that at a time when our customers really need it. This is the power and promise of the Golden Arches,"" John Palmaccio, McDonald's owner and operator and chair of the Operators National Advertising Fund, said in a statement to CNBC on the $5 promotion.— CNBC's Amelia Lucas contributed to this report.",CNBC,15/05/2024,"[""In this articleMcDonald's is set to offer a $5 value meal in the U.S., but only for a limited time."", 'The promotion will include four items for $5 — a McChicken or McDouble, four-piece chicken nuggets, fries and a drink — and will run for roughly a month, beginning on June 25, according to a person familiar with the offering who was not authorized to speak about it publicly.', '""We know how much it means to our customers when McDonald\'s offers meaningful value and communicates it through national advertising.', 'That\'s been true since our very beginning and never more important than it is today,"" McDonald\'s said in a statement to CNBC.CNBC last week reported the fast-food giant was working to bring a value offering to menus, with details being discussed and voted on by franchisees.', 'An initial proposal for the meal did not clear necessary hurdles.', 'Coca-Colaadded marketing funds to the equation to make the deal more appealing, CNBC reported Friday.', 'In a statement on Wednesday, Coca-Cola said: ""We routinely partner with our customers on marketing programs to meet consumer needs.', 'This helps us grow our businesses together.', '""Financial terms of that partnership were not disclosed.', 'The monthlong promotion comes at a time when restaurants are finally beginning to feel a long-anticipated consumer pullback.', ""McDonald'srecently reported a mixed first quarter, with U.S. same-store sales slightly missing expectations."", 'Higher prices helped grow average checks, but some consumers pulled back as a result of the steeper costs.', '""Consumers continue to be even more discriminating with every dollar that they spend as they faced elevated prices in their day-to-day spending, which is putting pressure on the [quick-service restaurant] industry,"" CEO Chris Kempczinski said on the company\'s earnings call on April 30.He added McDonald\'s has to be ""laser-focused"" on affordability to attract diners.', '""Great value and affordability have always been a hallmark of McDonald\'s brand, and all three legs of the stool are coming together to deliver that at a time when our customers really need it.', 'This is the power and promise of the Golden Arches,"" John Palmaccio, McDonald\'s owner and operator and chair of the Operators National Advertising Fund, said in a statement to CNBC on the $5 promotion.—', ""CNBC's Amelia Lucas contributed to this report.""]",0.1443589425847401,"""Great value and affordability have always been a hallmark of McDonald's brand, and all three legs of the stool are coming together to deliver that at a time when our customers really need it.",An initial proposal for the meal did not clear necessary hurdles.,0.1401060989924839,"Coca-Colaadded marketing funds to the equation to make the deal more appealing, CNBC reported Friday.","McDonald'srecently reported a mixed first quarter, with U.S. same-store sales slightly missing expectations.",2024-05-19 $400 for one pineapple: The rise of luxury fruit,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/19/business/pineapple-rubyglow-price/index.html," Published 9:30 AM EDT, Sun May 19, 2024 ","Imagine you have $400 to spend on a luxury dining experience. You might treat yourself to a tin of premium caviar, a bottle or two of very fine wine or a multi-course meal at a high-end restaurant. Or you could blow it all on a single pineapple. The Rubyglow pineapple –— bred for its distinctive red exterior and its sweetness — costs $395.99 at Melissa’s Produce, a California-based seller of specialty fruit and veggies. It took Del Monte, a wholesaler which sells a variety of produce but specializes in pineapple, a decade and a half to develop the red-hued fruit. A limited crop was first available in China early this year. Recently, Del Monte decided to see how the item would fare in the United States, and Melissa’s starting selling it at the astronomical price. It may not seem like the best time to market a (very, very) expensive piece of fruit in America. It wasn’t that long ago that soaring grocery prices made headline news, stressing out consumers and stretching their budgets thin. Still nervous about inflation and worried about unemployment, many Americans are now spending less. And yet, there’s interest in premium fruit — enough to convince Del Monte to bring the Rubyglow, which is grown in Costa Rica, stateside. “Consumers are willing to pay for something that’s special,” said Cindy van Rijswick, fresh produce strategist for Rabobank’s global research team. When it comes to specialty produce, “there’s always a small market for higher-end restaurants, or foodies, or certain online channels,” she said. Americans have become interested in particular for new fruit varieties in recent years, paying a premium for Honeycrisp apples, Cotton Candy grapes, Sumo Citrus and vertically-grown Japanese strawberries. Now, they are hungry for different types of fruit, and are ready to shell out for exciting new options. But a $400 pineapple? That’s a bit rich. When the Honeycrisp was introduced over 30 years ago, there weren’t many apple options in the supermarket. Red Delicious, Golden Delicious and, in some areas, McIntosh apples were standard fare, recalled Jim Luby, a professor in the horticultural science department at the University of Minnesota. But that was about it. “If you didn’t go out to a local orchard, you didn’t have that many choices.” People were hungry for more, and Honeycrisp fit the bill — sweet, crisp and novel. “It became popular in Minnesota amongst our growers,” said Luby, who was part of the team that developed the variety. “There wasn’t that much production. So it was priced high. And yet it kept selling.” Marketing new produce is a costly affair. Researchers have to breed and cross-breed, wait out the growing cycle, and start over if the fruit disappoints. Finding something that is both delicious and resilient enough to be commercially successful takes time, and a lot of painstaking work. Then plant scientists have to convince growers to make an investment in an unproven fruit, devoting resources that could be used for old favorites. But the Honeycrisp helped show that the risk can be justified. Since the apple’s success, variety in the produce section has increased. Over roughly the past decade, per capita availability — a good proxy for consumption — of higher-priced fruit, like berries, mango and avocados, has increased, according to Rabobank, which drew from USDA data. In that time, availability of cheaper fruit like apples and bananas has essentially stayed flat. Some specialty fruits have even developed cult followings: those Cotton Candy grapes, named for their sweetness, hit the scene in 2011 and quickly became popular. Sumo Citrus, a hybrid of navel oranges, pomelos and mandarins, was more of a slow burn, but has exploded in recent years. In these cases, consumers have been willing to spend a little bit more. But those items are cheap in comparison to Oishii’s specialty strawberries, grown indoors in a climate-controlled vertical farm. When its berries first became available to the public in 2018, Oishii charged $50 for a pack of eight. Oishii is selling more than just berries: It’s selling a luxury item. The berries are packed in flat boxes that spotlight each individual fruit, more like a package for hand-crafted chocolate truffles than the mold-hiding plastic containers you see at a supermarket. Each fruit is supposed to be perfect. “Even at $50, we had thousands of people on the waitlist constantly,” said Oishii CEO Hiroki Koga. Buzzy or not, $50 for strawberries is not a sustainable price. Today, after rounds of funding and improved technology, Oishii’s products are more readily available, and much cheaper. You can get Oishii berries at mainstream grocers for around $10-$14 per pack. Del Monte’s researchers have been coming up with different types of pineapples for years, designing proprietary fruit and often optimizing for taste. In 2020 the company launched its own pretty, giftable fruit — the Pinkglow pineapple, which has pink flesh and comes in its own special box. The Pinkglow was never supposed to be a grocery list staple, said Melissa Mackay, VP of marketing in North America at Del Monte. “It’s a hostess gift, it’s a Mother’s Day gift,” she said. It’s also perfect for Instagram and TikTok, where food influencers with large followings cut open the fruit, marveled at its color and shared their reviews (the verdict: very sweet). At first, the Pinkglow was sold for about $50. Today, you can get one for far less, online between around $8 and $29 — bargain prices, relatively, but still steep for a pineapple. If you can afford it, splurging on a pink pineapple is “permissible, because you’re investing in something that’s good for you,” said Melanie Zanoza Bartelme, associate director of Mintel Food & Drink. “It’s like people who go to Erewhon and spend almost $20 on a smoothie that a celebrity created,” she said, referring to the high-end Los Angeles grocery store known for collaborating with celebrities on pricey smoothies (like Hailey Bieber’s Strawberry Glaze Skin Smoothie, priced at $19 for a 20-ounce cup). Still, she noted, there is a “blank space between a $16 pineapple and a $400 pineapple.” Melissa’s Produce, which sells everything from truffles to mangosteens to kumquats, describes the Rubyglow on its website as a “rare gem” and “the pinnacle of luxury fruit,” adding that “for the gourmand, it’s an unforgettable gift.” The pitch has had limited success. Melissa’s started with 50 pineapples, according to Robert Schueller, director of public relations at Melissa’s Produce. So far, it has sold about half that number over the course of a month, including to restaurants in Las Vegas and Southern California, which he said are using the fruit in displays. “There’s a market for this,” Schueller said. It’s just a very small, very niche market. “This is not something for everybody.” To try to create more buzz, Melissa’s reached out to a handful of food influencers, including Bo Corley, a chef who shares recipes and other food tidbits on his social channels. The pineapple “was absolutely delightful,” Corley said. “There’s almost like a bitter aftertaste when you eat too much pineapple,” he explained. “You don’t have that with the Rubyglow.” But, he said, it wasn’t worth $400. Corley can see people spending to get their hands on the Rubyglow, if not for the taste of the pineapple itself then for the wow factor of the brilliant exterior. “I think charcuterie boards this Christmas, Thanksgiving — you’re going to see this Rubyglow as a centerpiece, especially in an affluent house,” he said. In other words, people may not spend for the taste of the pineapple, but just to show off that they have it.",CNN,19/05/2024,"['Imagine you have $400 to spend on a luxury dining experience.', 'You might treat yourself to a tin of premium caviar, a bottle or two of very fine wine or a multi-course meal at a high-end restaurant.', 'Or you could blow it all on a single pineapple.', 'The Rubyglow pineapple –— bred for its distinctive red exterior and its sweetness — costs $395.99 at Melissa’s Produce, a California-based seller of specialty fruit and veggies.', 'It took Del Monte, a wholesaler which sells a variety of produce but specializes in pineapple, a decade and a half to develop the red-hued fruit.', 'A limited crop was first available in China early this year.', 'Recently, Del Monte decided to see how the item would fare in the United States, and Melissa’s starting selling it at the astronomical price.', 'It may not seem like the best time to market a (very, very) expensive piece of fruit in America.', 'It wasn’t that long ago that soaring grocery prices made headline news, stressing out consumers and stretching their budgets thin.', 'Still nervous about inflation and worried about unemployment, many Americans are now spending less.', 'And yet, there’s interest in premium fruit — enough to convince Del Monte to bring the Rubyglow, which is grown in Costa Rica, stateside.', '“Consumers are willing to pay for something that’s special,” said Cindy van Rijswick, fresh produce strategist for Rabobank’s global research team.', 'When it comes to specialty produce, “there’s always a small market for higher-end restaurants, or foodies, or certain online channels,” she said.', 'Americans have become interested in particular for new fruit varieties in recent years, paying a premium for Honeycrisp apples, Cotton Candy grapes, Sumo Citrus and vertically-grown Japanese strawberries.', 'Now, they are hungry for different types of fruit, and are ready to shell out for exciting new options.', 'But a $400 pineapple?', 'That’s a bit rich.', 'When the Honeycrisp was introduced over 30 years ago, there weren’t many apple options in the supermarket.', 'Red Delicious, Golden Delicious and, in some areas, McIntosh apples were standard fare, recalled Jim Luby, a professor in the horticultural science department at the University of Minnesota.', 'But that was about it. “', 'If you didn’t go out to a local orchard, you didn’t have that many choices.”', 'People were hungry for more, and Honeycrisp fit the bill —sweet, crisp and novel.', '“It became popular in Minnesota amongst our growers,” said Luby, who was part of the team that developed the variety. “', 'There wasn’t that much production.', 'So it was priced high.', 'And yet it kept selling.”', 'Marketing new produce is a costly affair.', 'Researchers have to breed and cross-breed, wait out the growing cycle, and start over if the fruit disappoints.', 'Finding something that is both delicious and resilient enough to be commercially successful takes time, and a lot of painstaking work.', 'Then plant scientists have to convince growers to make an investment in an unproven fruit, devoting resources that could be used for old favorites.', 'But the Honeycrisp helped show that the risk can be justified.', 'Since the apple’s success, variety in the produce section has increased.', 'Over roughly the past decade, per capita availability —a good proxy for consumption — of higher-priced fruit, like berries, mango and avocados, has increased, according to Rabobank, which drew from USDA data.', 'In that time, availability of cheaper fruit like apples and bananas has essentially stayed flat.', 'Some specialty fruits have even developed cult followings: those Cotton Candy grapes, named for their sweetness, hit the scene in 2011 and quickly became popular.', 'Sumo Citrus, a hybrid of navel oranges, pomelos and mandarins, was more of a slow burn, but has exploded in recent years.', 'In these cases, consumers have been willing to spend a little bit more.', 'But those items are cheap in comparison to Oishii’s specialty strawberries, grown indoors in a climate-controlled vertical farm.', 'When its berries first became available to the public in 2018, Oishii charged $50 for a pack of eight.', 'Oishii is selling more than just berries: It’s selling a luxury item.', 'The berries are packed in flat boxes that spotlight each individual fruit, more like a package for hand-crafted chocolate truffles than the mold-hiding plastic containers you see at a supermarket.', 'Each fruit is supposed to be perfect.', '“Even at $50, we had thousands of people on the waitlist constantly,” said Oishii CEO Hiroki Koga.', 'Buzzy or not, $50 for strawberries is not a sustainable price.', 'Today, after rounds of funding and improved technology, Oishii’s products are more readily available, and much cheaper.', 'You can get Oishii berries at mainstream grocers for around $10-$14 per pack.', 'Del Monte’s researchers have been coming up with different types of pineapples for years, designing proprietary fruit and often optimizing for taste.', 'In 2020 the company launched its own pretty, giftable fruit —the Pinkglow pineapple, which has pink flesh and comes in its own special box.', 'The Pinkglow was never supposed to be a grocery list staple, said Melissa Mackay, VP of marketing in North America at Del Monte. “', 'It’s a hostess gift, it’s a Mother’s Day gift,” she said.', 'It’s also perfect for Instagram and TikTok, where food influencers with large followings cut open the fruit, marveled at its color and shared their reviews (the verdict: very sweet).', 'At first, the Pinkglow was sold for about $50.', 'Today, you can get one for far less, online between around $8 and $29 — bargain prices, relatively, but still steep for a pineapple.', 'If you can afford it, splurging on a pink pineapple is “permissible, because you’re investing in something that’s good for you,” said Melanie Zanoza Bartelme, associate director of Mintel Food & Drink. “', 'It’s like people who go to Erewhon and spend almost $20 on a smoothie that a celebrity created,” she said, referring to the high-end Los Angeles grocery store known for collaborating with celebrities on pricey smoothies (like Hailey Bieber’s Strawberry Glaze Skin Smoothie, priced at $19 for a 20-ounce cup).', 'Still, she noted, there is a “blank space between a $16 pineapple and a $400 pineapple.”', 'Melissa’s Produce, which sells everything from truffles to mangosteens to kumquats, describes the Rubyglow on its website as a “rare gem” and “the pinnacle of luxury fruit,” adding that “for the gourmand, it’s an unforgettable gift.”', 'The pitch has had limited success.', 'Melissa’s started with 50 pineapples, according to Robert Schueller, director of public relations at Melissa’s Produce.', 'So far, it has sold about half that number over the course of a month, including to restaurants in Las Vegas and Southern California, which he said are using the fruit in displays.', '“There’s a market for this,” Schueller said.', 'It’s just a very small, very niche market. “', 'This is not something for everybody.”', 'To try to create more buzz, Melissa’s reached out to a handful of food influencers, including Bo Corley, a chef who shares recipes and other food tidbits on his social channels.', 'The pineapple “was absolutely delightful,” Corley said. “', 'There’s almost like a bitter aftertaste when you eat too much pineapple,” he explained. “', 'You don’t have that with the Rubyglow.”', 'But, he said, it wasn’t worth $400.', 'Corley can see people spending to get their hands on the Rubyglow, if not for the taste of the pineapple itself then for the wow factor of the brilliant exterior.', '“I think charcuterie boards this Christmas, Thanksgiving —you’re going to see this Rubyglow as a centerpiece, especially in an affluent house,” he said.', 'In other words, people may not spend for the taste of the pineapple, but just to show off that they have it.']",0.2596528769118228,"It’s also perfect for Instagram and TikTok, where food influencers with large followings cut open the fruit, marveled at its color and shared their reviews (the verdict: very sweet).","Still nervous about inflation and worried about unemployment, many Americans are now spending less.",0.5733190046416389,"Since the apple’s success, variety in the produce section has increased.","Still nervous about inflation and worried about unemployment, many Americans are now spending less.",2024-05-19 The Chevrolet Corvette is officially going electric,https://edition.cnn.com/2022/04/25/business/electric-hybrid-corvette/index.html," Updated 12:22 PM EDT, Mon April 25, 2022 ","General Motors will produce a fully electric Chevrolet Corvette, GM President Mark Reuss announced in a LinkedIn post Monday morning. Reuss didn’t say when the electric Corvette would come, but he hinted that a hybrid model could come relatively soon. “We will offer an electrified Corvette as early as next year,” he wrote. An accompanying video the company posted to Twitter showed what appeared to be a hybrid Corvette, and in another first, showed the front wheels spinning and throwing snow as if being powered. All Corvettes produced by the company previously have been rear-wheel-drive only. While Reuss’s post implies a hybrid Corvette will be based on the current generation of the car, it’s not clear if the all-electric version will be a variation of this car or a completely different future model. “Electrified” is an auto industry term encompassing everything from hybrid to fully electric vehicles, and anything with an electric motor can count as “electrified.” It has long been rumored that the current generation of the Corvette, the first with its gasoline engine mounted behind the seats instead of in the front, could be built with a hybrid system. Reuss has also previously hinted there would be electrified variants of the car. Various companies are working on electric sports cars. Most all-electric vehicles in production so far have been four-door sedans and SUVs, as the need for batteries lends itself to larger and heavier vehicles. Tesla’s first car, the Lotus Elise-based Tesla Roadster, was an electric sports car, but the second-generation of Tesla Roadster, originally unveiled as a prototype in 2017, has yet to go into production. Some manufacturers, such as Lamborghini, have said that current battery technology doesn’t allow for a optimum sports car performance from a purely electric vehicle. Lamborghini has been working on plug-in hybrid sports cars, though. To date, the Corvette is only available in the base Stingray version with 6.2-liter V8 engine producing up to 495 horsepower. A 670 horsepower Corvette Z06 with a 5.5-liter V8 was unveiled last fall. The previous generation of the Corvette included included a 755-horsepower ZR1 version. Nothing like that has yet been announced for the current model but GM engineers have said a major reason for putting the engine in the back was to allow for better performance at extremely high horsepower levels. Besides saving gas, hybrid systems can also be used in high-performance cars to add additional power and to provide for quicker acceleration since electric motors can provide power to the wheels more quickly than gas engines. Ferrari’s most powerful sports cars are hybrids, for instance. GM has said it plans to produce only zero-emission vehicles, meaning fully electric or powered by hydrogen fuel cells, by 2035.",CNN,25/04/2022,"['General Motors will produce a fully electric Chevrolet Corvette, GM President Mark Reuss announced in a LinkedIn post Monday morning.', 'Reuss didn’t say when the electric Corvette would come, but he hinted that a hybrid model could come relatively soon. “', 'We will offer an electrified Corvette as early as next year,” he wrote.', 'An accompanying video the company posted to Twitter showed what appeared to be a hybrid Corvette, and in another first, showed the front wheels spinning and throwing snow as if being powered.', 'All Corvettes produced by the company previously have been rear-wheel-drive only.', 'While Reuss’s post implies a hybrid Corvette will be based on the current generation of the car, it’s not clear if the all-electric version will be a variation of this car or a completely different future model.', '“Electrified” is an auto industry term encompassing everything from hybrid to fully electric vehicles, and anything with an electric motor can count as “electrified.”', 'It has long been rumored that the current generation of the Corvette, the first with its gasoline engine mounted behind the seats instead of in the front, could be built with a hybrid system.', 'Reuss has also previously hinted there would be electrified variants of the car.', 'Various companies are working on electric sports cars.', 'Most all-electric vehicles in production so far have been four-door sedans and SUVs, as the need for batteries lends itself to larger and heavier vehicles.', 'Tesla’s first car, the Lotus Elise-based Tesla Roadster, was an electric sports car, but the second-generation of Tesla Roadster, originally unveiled as a prototype in 2017, has yet to go into production.', 'Some manufacturers, such as Lamborghini, have said that current battery technology doesn’t allow for a optimum sports car performance from a purely electric vehicle.', 'Lamborghini has been working on plug-in hybrid sports cars, though.', 'To date, the Corvette is only available in the base Stingray version with 6.2-liter V8 engine producing up to 495 horsepower.', 'A 670 horsepower Corvette Z06 with a 5.5-liter V8 was unveiled last fall.', 'The previous generation of the Corvette included included a 755-horsepower ZR1 version.', 'Nothing like that has yet been announced for the current model but GM engineers have said a major reason for putting the engine in the back was to allow for better performance at extremely high horsepower levels.', 'Besides saving gas, hybrid systems can also be used in high-performance cars to add additional power and to provide for quicker acceleration since electric motors can provide power to the wheels more quickly than gas engines.', 'Ferrari’s most powerful sports cars are hybrids, for instance.', 'GM has said it plans to produce only zero-emission vehicles, meaning fully electric or powered by hydrogen fuel cells, by 2035.']",0.0521320736918344,Nothing like that has yet been announced for the current model but GM engineers have said a major reason for putting the engine in the back was to allow for better performance at extremely high horsepower levels.,"While Reuss’s post implies a hybrid Corvette will be based on the current generation of the car, it’s not clear if the all-electric version will be a variation of this car or a completely different future model.",0.3646016319592793,"Besides saving gas, hybrid systems can also be used in high-performance cars to add additional power and to provide for quicker acceleration since electric motors can provide power to the wheels more quickly than gas engines.","Some manufacturers, such as Lamborghini, have said that current battery technology doesn’t allow for a optimum sports car performance from a purely electric vehicle.",2024-05-19 Novavax stock jumps 50% as Sanofi deal kicks off turning point for struggling vaccine maker,https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/13/novavax-stock-jumps-on-sanofi-covid-vaccine-deal.html,2024-05-13T21:46:34+0000,"In this articleShares of Novavax closed nearly 50% higher on Monday as Wall Street cheered the company's new multibillion-dollar deal with French drugmaker Sanofi that sparked a dramatic turnaround for the struggling vaccine maker.Novavax's stock almost doubled on Friday after it announced the licensing agreement with Sanofi. Novavax on Friday said the deal allows the company to remove its ""going concern"" warning, which it first issued in February 2023 due to major doubts about its ability to stay afloat.""It really does help our business. It keeps us well capitalized, it takes the going concern off, it gives us the chance to pivot our strategy more toward what we're best at — to bring additional value to all of our stakeholders, including our shareholders,"" Novavax CEO John Jacobs told CNBC in an interview. Under the agreement, Sanofi will take a less than 5% stake in Novavax. The deal also entitles Novavax to an upfront cash payment of $500 million and future payments contingent on certain milestones, as well as royalties. Sanofi, one of the world's largest vaccine makers, will co-market Novavax's Covid vaccine in most countries starting in 2025. The deal also allows Sanofi to use Novavax's Covid shot and flagship vaccine technology, Matrix-M adjuvant, to develop new vaccine products. The shots include combination jabs targeting Covid and the flu. In a note Sunday, Jefferies analyst Roger Song said the deal will provide significant capital to Novavax and support the company's growth. ""Economically, the deal is highly lucrative and impactful,"" Song wrote. He said the upfront payment helps remove investor worry about Novavax's going concern warning, and that milestone payments are ""significant and relatively near-term"" for the company since they are not tied to sales. Meanwhile, royalties will provide a steady revenue stream each year, Song said. He added that the deal ""validates"" the company's protein-based vaccine platform. Novavax's shot is the first Covid vaccine to use protein technology, a decades-old method for fighting viruses used in routine shots against Hepatitis B and shingles. Health officials view the vaccine as a valuable alternative for people who do not want to take messenger RNA jabs from Pfizer and Moderna.In a note on Sunday, Leerink Partners analyst David Risinger said he is interested to see how effective Sanofi is at raising consumer awareness about how the side effects of Novavax's Covid vaccine are easier for patients to tolerate compared to competing shots from Pfizer and Moderna.Risinger noted that consumer hesitancy around Covid boosters has come in part from fears about the fatigue and discomfort associated with Pfizer's and Moderna's shots. The firm expects Sanofi ""to drive greater commercial success of [Novavax's] vaccine starting in 2025, due to its commercial scale and contracting abilities, but it is difficult to predict the magnitude of impact,"" Risinger wrote. He added that there could be ""further upside"" for Sanofi and Novavax if they develop a combination Covid and flu vaccine that has advantages over the mRNA combo shots being developed by Pfizer and Moderna.",CNBC,13/05/2024,"[""In this articleShares of Novavax closed nearly 50% higher on Monday as Wall Street cheered the company's new multibillion-dollar deal with French drugmaker Sanofi that sparked a dramatic turnaround for the struggling vaccine maker."", ""Novavax's stock almost doubled on Friday after it announced the licensing agreement with Sanofi."", 'Novavax on Friday said the deal allows the company to remove its ""going concern"" warning, which it first issued in February 2023 due to major doubts about its ability to stay afloat.', '""It really does help our business.', 'It keeps us well capitalized, it takes the going concern off, it gives us the chance to pivot our strategy more toward what we\'re best at — to bring additional value to all of our stakeholders, including our shareholders,"" Novavax CEO John Jacobs told CNBC in an interview.', 'Under the agreement, Sanofi will take a less than 5% stake in Novavax.', 'The deal also entitles Novavax to an upfront cash payment of $500 million and future payments contingent on certain milestones, as well as royalties.', ""Sanofi, one of the world's largest vaccine makers, will co-market Novavax's Covid vaccine in most countries starting in 2025."", ""The deal also allows Sanofi to use Novavax's Covid shot and flagship vaccine technology, Matrix-M adjuvant, to develop new vaccine products."", 'The shots include combination jabs targeting Covid and the flu.', ""In a note Sunday, Jefferies analyst Roger Song said the deal will provide significant capital to Novavax and support the company's growth."", '""Economically, the deal is highly lucrative and impactful,"" Song wrote.', 'He said the upfront payment helps remove investor worry about Novavax\'s going concern warning, and that milestone payments are ""significant and relatively near-term"" for the company since they are not tied to sales.', 'Meanwhile, royalties will provide a steady revenue stream each year, Song said.', 'He added that the deal ""validates"" the company\'s protein-based vaccine platform.', ""Novavax's shot is the first Covid vaccine to use protein technology, a decades-old method for fighting viruses used in routine shots against Hepatitis B and shingles."", 'Health officials view the vaccine as a valuable alternative for people who do not want to take messenger RNA jabs from Pfizer and Moderna.', ""In a note on Sunday, Leerink Partners analyst David Risinger said he is interested to see how effective Sanofi is at raising consumer awareness about how the side effects of Novavax's Covid vaccine are easier for patients to tolerate compared to competing shots from Pfizer and Moderna."", ""Risinger noted that consumer hesitancy around Covid boosters has come in part from fears about the fatigue and discomfort associated with Pfizer's and Moderna's shots."", 'The firm expects Sanofi ""to drive greater commercial success of [Novavax\'s] vaccine starting in 2025, due to its commercial scale and contracting abilities, but it is difficult to predict the magnitude of impact,"" Risinger wrote.', 'He added that there could be ""further upside"" for Sanofi and Novavax if they develop a combination Covid and flu vaccine that has advantages over the mRNA combo shots being developed by Pfizer and Moderna.']",0.1550329162990072,"It keeps us well capitalized, it takes the going concern off, it gives us the chance to pivot our strategy more toward what we're best at — to bring additional value to all of our stakeholders, including our shareholders,"" Novavax CEO John Jacobs told CNBC in an interview.",Risinger noted that consumer hesitancy around Covid boosters has come in part from fears about the fatigue and discomfort associated with Pfizer's and Moderna's shots.,0.8582105897367001,In this articleShares of Novavax closed nearly 50% higher on Monday as Wall Street cheered the company's new multibillion-dollar deal with French drugmaker Sanofi that sparked a dramatic turnaround for the struggling vaccine maker.,Risinger noted that consumer hesitancy around Covid boosters has come in part from fears about the fatigue and discomfort associated with Pfizer's and Moderna's shots.,2024-05-19 Apple announces its annual developers conference is set for June 10,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/tech/apple-annual-developers-conference-june-10/index.html," Updated 2:20 PM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","Apple announced its annual Worldwide Developer Conference will kick off on June 10, when the company is expected to show off its latest AI advancements. The conference, which is widely anticipated each year as a major showcase for Apple software news, will run Monday, June 10 through Friday, June 14. Although last year’s WWDC focused on the unveiling of the Vision Pro mixed reality headset, which launched in stores in February, this year is expected to turn to Apple’s AI efforts. The company is reportedly interested in licensing and building Google’s Gemini AI engine, which includes chatbots and other AI tools, into upcoming iPhones and its iOS 18 features. As more tech companies pour billions of dollars into the development and rollout of artificial intelligence, Apple has largely been left out of the conversation, with many other tech companies making big strides in the space. A partnership with Google would catapult Apple into the growing AI arms race. Apple researchers also recently said they’ve developed a family of multimodal models — which refers to an AI system that can interpret and generate different types of data, such as text and images at the same time — called MM1. A report from those researchers said those new methods boast “superior abilities” and can offer advanced reasoning and in-context learning to respond to text and images. In a press release on Tuesday, the company said WWDC 2024 will also share software updates coming to the iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, Apple TV and Vision Pro headset.",CNN,26/03/2024,"['Apple announced its annual Worldwide Developer Conference will kick off on June 10, when the company is expected to show off its latest AI advancements.', 'The conference, which is widely anticipated each year as a major showcase for Apple software news, will run Monday, June 10 through Friday, June 14.', 'Although last year’s WWDC focused on the unveiling of the Vision Pro mixed reality headset, which launched in stores in February, this year is expected to turn to Apple’s AI efforts.', 'The company is reportedly interested in licensing and building Google’s Gemini AI engine, which includes chatbots and other AI tools, into upcoming iPhones and its iOS 18 features.', 'As more tech companies pour billions of dollars into the development and rollout of artificial intelligence, Apple has largely been left out of the conversation, with many other tech companies making big strides in the space.', 'A partnership with Google would catapult Apple into the growing AI arms race.', 'Apple researchers also recently said they’ve developed a family of multimodal models — which refers to an AI system that can interpret and generate different types of data, such as text and images at the same time — called MM1.', 'A report from those researchers said those new methods boast “superior abilities” and can offer advanced reasoning and in-context learning to respond to text and images.', 'In a press release on Tuesday, the company said WWDC 2024 will also share software updates coming to the iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, Apple TV and Vision Pro headset.']",0.3259092919755588,A report from those researchers said those new methods boast “superior abilities” and can offer advanced reasoning and in-context learning to respond to text and images.,,0.9975101351737976,A report from those researchers said those new methods boast “superior abilities” and can offer advanced reasoning and in-context learning to respond to text and images.,,2024-05-19 The pandemic has changed when Americans expect to retire,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/15/investing/premarket-stocks-trading/index.html," Published 7:46 AM EDT, Wed May 15, 2024 ","A version of this story first appeared in CNN Business’ Before the Bell newsletter. Not a subscriber? You can sign up right here. You can listen to an audio version of the newsletter by clicking the same link. A retirement savings crisis may be looming in the United States but it doesn’t appear to be forcing people to consider working full-time into their old age. By the end of the decade, about 21% of the population will be 65 or older, up from 15% in 2016, according to forecasts by the Census Bureau. Most non-retired adults have some type of retirement savings, but only 36% think their savings are on track. New research from economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York finds that this retirement savings deficit hasn’t made a dent in when Americans plan to exit, or partially exit, the workforce. In fact, researchers found that since the pandemic, workers have reported much lower expectations of working full-time beyond ages 62 and 67 (the latter is the retirement age for full Social Security benefits). Surprisingly, they found that the decline is particularly notable for lower-income and female workers. What’s happening: The pandemic ushered in the great resignation. Almost 50 million people quit their job in the two years following the worst of Covid-19, citing pressures such as burnout, general job dissatisfaction or child care or elder care needs. Amid a tight labor market, many were also able to find a better job, with better pay. The trend was so prevalent that Beyoncé even released a song about it. But even though the pandemic is over, and the US economy has recovered quickly from the 2020 recession, the labor force is still experiencing unprecedented changes, report New York Fed economists Felix Aidala, Gizem Kosar and Wilbert van der Klaauw. Looking at the Survey of Consumer Expectations’ (SCE) triannual Labor Market Survey, the economists found that beginning in March 2020, retirement-age full-time employment expectations began to plunge and have persistently declined since. The survey hit an all-time low in March 2024, when just 45.8% of respondents said that they planned to work full-time beyond the age of 62. Those expectations averaged 54.6% in the six years before the pandemic. “The decline is broad-based across age, education, and income groups, with workers under age 45, without a college degree, and with annual household incomes below $60,000 showing slightly larger declines than their peers,” wrote the researchers. What it means: While the great resignation has ended and wage growth is easing, the New York Fed’s survey responses still “reveal a persistent decline in expectations of working full-time beyond ages 62 and 67,” said the economists. They’re not sure what’s behind the phenomenon and they said they were surprised by the results given increases in life expectancy. There could be a litany of explanations, many due to post-pandemic cultural shifts about the value of work and an increase in savings during the pandemic. Either way, it could be significant for the economy. “The pandemic-induced change in retirement expectations may continue to affect the labor market in years to come,” they wrote. “It also can have important macroeconomic implications when consumers act on their expectations in making consumption and saving decisions.” It could also have serious implications for the timing of claims for Social Security benefits. Social Security payments still provide about 90% of income for 12% of older men and 15% of older women, according to Social Security Agency surveys. But without intervention, the Social Security trust fund will be depleted by the mid-2030s, meaning that only a portion of retirees’ expected benefits will be paid out. Lawmakers have faced a decades-long political stalemate on how to fix it. Yes, but: This is a survey of expectations, researchers at the New York Fed are quick to point out. Just because Americans say they plan to shift to part-time work or retire early, it doesn’t mean that they’ll be able to. The economy has been resilient, the job market healthy and consumers keep spending, but more Americans are becoming financially overextended — especially on their credit cards, reports my colleague Alicia Wallace. New data released Tuesday by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York showed that as household debt balances grew during the first quarter, delinquencies also marched higher. Notably, the percentage of credit card balances in serious delinquency (90 days or more late) climbed to its highest level since 2012. “In the first quarter of 2024, credit card and auto loan transition rates into serious delinquency continued to rise across all age groups,” Joelle Scally, regional economic principal within the Household and Public Policy Research Division at the New York Fed, said in a statement. “An increasing number of borrowers missed credit card payments, revealing worsening financial distress among some households.” Aggregate delinquency rates increased during the first quarter to 3.2% of outstanding debt in some stage of delinquency, the highest since the fourth quarter of 2020, according to the New York Fed’s latest Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit. The transitions into delinquency — especially serious delinquency — increased across all debt types, according to the report. Walmart said Tuesday it is eliminating several hundred corporate jobs and will relocate most of its remaining remote office staff to its Bentonville, Arkansas, headquarters, reports CNN’s Parija Kavilanz. Walmart confirmed the move in a memo sent by Donna Morris, its chief people officer, to employees on Tuesday and obtained by CNN. Morris, in the memo, said the decision to relocate employees and ask other remote staff to come back into the office was made to facilitate better collaboration, innovation “and move even faster.” “We also believe it helps strengthen our culture as well as grow and develop our associates,” she said in the memo. The relocation will impact the majority of workers in Walmart’s Dallas, Atlanta and Toronto offices. While most relocations will be to its Bentonville headquarters, some workers will be relocated to Walmart offices in the San Francisco Bay Area or to Hoboken, New Jersey, and the New York area. “In addition, some parts of our business have made changes that will result in a reduction of several hundred campus roles,” Morris said in the memo. “While the overall numbers are small in percentage, we are focused on supporting each of our associates affected by these changes.” Walmart is expected to report its latest quarterly earnings on Thursday. The latest round of layoffs at the world’s largest retailer comes close on the heels of Walmart’s announcement last month that it was exiting its virtual healthcare services and was shuttering all 51 of its healthcare centers in six states.",CNN,15/05/2024,"['A version of this story first appeared in CNN Business’ Before the Bell newsletter.', 'Not a subscriber?', 'You can sign upright here.', 'You can listen to an audio version of the newsletter by clicking the same link.', 'A retirement savings crisis may be looming in the United States but it doesn’t appear to be forcing people to consider working full-time into their old age.', 'By the end of the decade, about 21% of the population will be 65 or older, up from 15% in 2016, according to forecasts by the Census Bureau.', 'Most non-retired adults have some type of retirement savings, but only 36% think their savings are on track.', 'New research from economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York finds that this retirement savings deficit hasn’t made a dent in when Americans plan to exit, or partially exit, the workforce.', 'In fact, researchers found that since the pandemic, workers have reported much lower expectations of working full-time beyond ages 62 and 67 (the latter is the retirement age for full Social Security benefits).', 'Surprisingly, they found that the decline is particularly notable for lower-income and female workers.', 'What’s happening: The pandemic ushered in the great resignation.', 'Almost 50 million people quit their job in the two years following the worst of Covid-19, citing pressures such as burnout, general job dissatisfaction or child care or elder care needs.', 'Amid a tight labor market, many were also able to find a better job, with better pay.', 'The trend was so prevalent that Beyoncé even released a song about it.', 'But even though the pandemic is over, and the US economy has recovered quickly from the 2020 recession, the labor force is still experiencing unprecedented changes, report New York Fed economists Felix Aidala, Gizem Kosar and Wilbert van der Klaauw.', 'Looking at the Survey of Consumer Expectations’ (SCE) triannual Labor Market Survey, the economists found that beginning in March 2020, retirement-age full-time employment expectations began to plunge and have persistently declined since.', 'The survey hit an all-time low in March 2024, when just 45.8% of respondents said that they planned to work full-time beyond the age of 62.', 'Those expectations averaged 54.6% in the six years before the pandemic.', '“The decline is broad-based across age, education, and income groups, with workers under age 45, without a college degree, and with annual household incomes below $60,000 showing slightly larger declines than their peers,” wrote the researchers.', 'What it means: While the great resignation has ended and wage growth is easing, the New York Fed’s survey responses still “reveal a persistent decline in expectations of working full-time beyond ages 62 and 67,” said the economists.', 'They’re not sure what’s behind the phenomenon and they said they were surprised by the results given increases in life expectancy.', 'There could be a litany of explanations, many due to post-pandemic cultural shifts about the value of work and an increase in savings during the pandemic.', 'Either way, it could be significant for the economy.', '“The pandemic-induced change in retirement expectations may continue to affect the labor market in years to come,” they wrote. “', 'It also can have important macroeconomic implications when consumers act on their expectations in making consumption and saving decisions.”', 'It could also have serious implications for the timing of claims for Social Security benefits.', 'Social Security payments still provideabout 90% of incomefor 12% of older men and 15% of older women, according to Social Security Agency surveys.', 'But without intervention, the Social Security trust fundwill be depletedby the mid-2030s, meaning that only a portion of retirees’ expected benefits will be paid out.', 'Lawmakers have faced a decades-long political stalemate on how to fix it.', 'Yes, but: This is a survey of expectations, researchers at the New York Fed are quick to point out.', 'Just because Americans say they plan to shift to part-time work or retire early, it doesn’t mean that they’ll be able to.', 'Theeconomy has been resilient, thejob market healthyandconsumers keep spending, but more Americans are becoming financially overextended — especially on their credit cards, reports my colleague Alicia Wallace.', 'New data released Tuesday by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York showed that as household debt balances grew during the first quarter, delinquencies also marched higher.', 'Notably, the percentage of credit card balances in serious delinquency (90 days or more late) climbed to its highest level since 2012.', '“In the first quarter of 2024, credit card and auto loan transition rates into serious delinquency continued to rise across all age groups,” Joelle Scally, regional economic principal within the Household and Public Policy Research Division at the New York Fed, said in a statement. “', 'An increasing number of borrowers missed credit card payments, revealing worsening financial distress among some households.”', 'Aggregate delinquency rates increased during the first quarter to 3.2% of outstanding debt in some stage of delinquency, the highest since the fourth quarter of 2020, according to the New York Fed’s latest Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit.', 'The transitions into delinquency — especially serious delinquency — increased across all debt types, according to the report.', 'Walmart said Tuesday it is eliminating several hundred corporate jobs and will relocate most of its remaining remote office staff to its Bentonville, Arkansas, headquarters, reports CNN’s Parija Kavilanz.', 'Walmart confirmed the move in a memo sent by Donna Morris, its chief people officer, to employees on Tuesday and obtained by CNN.', 'Morris, in the memo, said the decision to relocate employees and ask other remote staff to come back into the office was made to facilitate better collaboration, innovation “and move even faster.”', '“We also believe it helps strengthen our culture as well as grow and develop our associates,” she said in the memo.', 'The relocation will impact the majority of workers in Walmart’s Dallas, Atlanta and Toronto offices.', 'While most relocations will be to its Bentonville headquarters, some workers will be relocated to Walmart offices in the San Francisco Bay Area or to Hoboken, New Jersey, and the New York area.', '“In addition, some parts of our business have made changes that will result in a reduction of several hundred campus roles,” Morris said in the memo. “', 'While the overall numbers are small in percentage, we are focused on supporting each of our associates affected by these changes.”', 'Walmartis expected to report its latest quarterly earnings on Thursday.', 'The latest round of layoffs at the world’s largest retailer comes close on the heels of Walmart’s announcementlast monththat it was exiting its virtual healthcare services and was shuttering all 51 of its healthcare centers in six states.']",0.1241143921077076,"But without intervention, the Social Security trust fundwill be depletedby the mid-2030s, meaning that only a portion of retirees’ expected benefits will be paid out.","An increasing number of borrowers missed credit card payments, revealing worsening financial distress among some households.”",-0.0748085934540321,"By the end of the decade, about 21% of the population will be 65 or older, up from 15% in 2016, according to forecasts by the Census Bureau.","Looking at the Survey of Consumer Expectations’ (SCE) triannual Labor Market Survey, the economists found that beginning in March 2020, retirement-age full-time employment expectations began to plunge and have persistently declined since.",2024-05-19 Shrinkflation: Ritz reduces content by 30% but price remains same,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c51nyq0nxp0o,2024-05-17T17:44:58.577Z,"The number of Ritz crackers per box has been reduced by up to 30% but the price has remained the same. The size difference was first highlighted by The Grocer and confirmed by Mondelez, which owns the Ritz brand. Mondelez is being accused of ""shrinkflation"", where prices are kept the same but content reduced. Shelf prices in popular British supermarkets have remained the same with a box costing £1.25 in Tesco and Asda and £1.50 in Morrisons. The 200g packs of Original and Cheese crackers have now been replaced by packs weighing 150g and 140g. A spokesperson for Mondelez International confirmed the size change to the BBC. “We understand the economic pressures that consumers continue to face and any changes to our product sizes is a last resort for our business,"" they said, adding that the food producer is experiencing ""significantly higher input costs"" across its supply chain as ingredients cost far more than they had previously. It added that costs for energy, packaging and transport remain high. Global inflation - the rate at which prices rise - has come down from its peaks last year but continues to squeeze household budgets and raise operational costs for many businesses. Meanwhile, elevated energy costs have also meant rising business costs are passed on to consumers either in the form of less product for the same price, or a more expensive product overall. “As a result of this difficult environment, we have had to make the decision to reduce the weight of some of our products, so that we can keep them competitive, and not compromise on the great taste and quality that our fans enjoy,” the spokesperson added. Earlier this year, Which? revealed other examples of Shrinkflation in British supermarkets. In January, the following items were said to shrink in size but cost the same or go up in price: Which? said its research showed shoppers are often left paying more for less. ",BBC,17/05/2024,"['The number of Ritz crackers per box has been reduced by up to 30% but the price has remained the same.', 'The size difference was first highlighted by The Grocer and confirmed by Mondelez, which owns the Ritz brand.', 'Mondelez is being accused of ""shrinkflation"", where prices are kept the same but content reduced.', 'Shelf prices in popular British supermarkets have remained the same with a box costing £1.25 in Tesco and Asda and £1.50 in Morrisons.', 'The 200g packs of Original and Cheese crackers have now been replaced by packs weighing 150g and 140g. A spokesperson for Mondelez International confirmed the size change to the BBC. “', 'We understand the economic pressures that consumers continue to face and any changes to our product sizes is a last resort for our business,"" they said, adding that the food producer is experiencing ""significantly higher input costs"" across its supply chain as ingredients cost far more than they had previously.', 'It added that costs for energy, packaging and transport remain high.', 'Global inflation - the rate at which prices rise - has come down from its peaks last year but continues to squeeze household budgets and raise operational costs for many businesses.', 'Meanwhile, elevated energy costs have also meant rising business costs are passed on to consumers either in the form of less product for the same price, or a more expensive product overall. “', 'As a result of this difficult environment, we have had to make the decision to reduce the weight of some of our products, so that we can keep them competitive, and not compromise on the great taste and quality that our fans enjoy,” the spokesperson added.', 'Earlier this year, Which?', 'revealed other examples of Shrinkflation in British supermarkets.', 'In January, the following items were said to shrink in size but cost the same or go up in price: Which?', 'said its research showed shoppers are often left paying more for less.']",0.1151024160400792,"As a result of this difficult environment, we have had to make the decision to reduce the weight of some of our products, so that we can keep them competitive, and not compromise on the great taste and quality that our fans enjoy,” the spokesperson added.","We understand the economic pressures that consumers continue to face and any changes to our product sizes is a last resort for our business,"" they said, adding that the food producer is experiencing ""significantly higher input costs"" across its supply chain as ingredients cost far more than they had previously.",-0.3315910796324412,The number of Ritz crackers per box has been reduced by up to 30% but the price has remained the same.,Global inflation - the rate at which prices rise - has come down from its peaks last year but continues to squeeze household budgets and raise operational costs for many businesses.,2024-05-19 How ESPN’s Jeff Darlington landed at the center of the Scottie Scheffler arrest story,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/media/espn-jeff-darlington-scottie-scheffler-arrest/index.html," Published 10:43 AM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","ESPN journalist Jeff Darlington witnessed the arrest of World No. 1 golfer Scottie Scheffler Friday morning before the second round of the PGA Championship in Louisville, Kentucky, thrusting the reporter into the middle of one of the strangest sports stories in recent memory. Darlington and Scheffler had arrived at the course around the same time in preparation for the tournament. After reportedly attempting to drive around the scene of a fatal crash, Scheffler was arrested and charged with a felony and other counts. He was later released and has since teed off in the tournament. Darlington was not only a witness to the incident, he also attempted to intervene. He was only several feet away from Scheffler when the golfer was arrested, and Darlington tried – and failed – to explain to the police that Scheffler was a participant in the tournament. “We didn’t want to be part of this story, we ended up being at least on the periphery,” said ESPN commentator Dave Fleming on air after the incident. ESPN told CNN that the network is not commenting on this story. Darlington broke the news of Scheffler’s arrest in a series of posts on X and explained the incident in greater detail on ESPN’s SportsCenter less than an hour later. He said the incident occurred around 6 a.m. after a “misunderstanding” in which Scheffler tried to circumvent police presence at the scene of an unrelated car accident that occurred outside of golf club. “The police officer attempted to attach himself to Scheffler’s car, and Scheffler then stopped his vehicle at the entrance to Valhalla,” Darlington wrote on X. “The police officer then began to scream at Scheffler to get out of the car. When Scheffler exited the vehicle, the officer shoved Scheffler against the car and immediately placed him in handcuffs.” “At which point (Scheffler) - seeing me behind him - said ‘can you help?’ The police officers instructed me to step back,” Darlington told audiences on air shortly after. In a video posted on X an hour later, Darlington follows the police officers as they lead Scheffler away. Several police officers tell him to step back. “Right now he’s going to jail. He’s going to jail and there’s nothing you can do about it.” one officer told Darlington, referring to Scheffler. Darlington clarifies that he’s a member of the media, and the police reiterate that he needs to step back. “The police officers around the patrol car in which Scottie Scheffler was in had no idea he was even Scottie Scheffler,” Darlington clarified on air. “I say that because one police officer came up to me with his pad and said…can you tell me the name of the person who was just arrested.” Darlington said that players were told they were allowed to enter the facility, and that Scheffler said that he kept driving past the police vehicle because he “didn’t know that he was a police officer.” Scheffler was charged with second-degree assault on a police officer – a felony – along with lesser charges of third-degree criminal mischief, reckless driving and disregarding signals from officers directing traffic, according to Jefferson County court records. He’s been released from jail, according to the Louisville Metro Department of Corrections. Attorney Steve Romines, who represents Scheffler, told CNN affiliate WLKY that the golfer bypassed police because of a misunderstanding. “They were directing traffic, he held his media credential out and was going in like they’d been instructed to,” Romines said. Scheffler’s attorney declined to comment on why the golfer was charged with assault, saying he will let the case play out in court. The PGA Championship tournament was delayed by an hour and a half, and began at around 8:30 Friday morning. “This morning we were devastated to learn that a worker with one of our vendors was tragically struck and killed by a shuttle bus outside Valhalla Golf Club,” PGA said in a statement. “This is heartbreaking to all of us involved with the PGA Championship. We extend our sincere condolences to their family and loved ones.”",CNN,17/05/2024,"['ESPN journalist Jeff Darlington witnessed the arrest of World No.', '1 golfer Scottie Scheffler Friday morning before the second round of the PGA Championship in Louisville, Kentucky, thrusting the reporter into the middle of one of the strangest sports stories in recent memory.', 'Darlington and Scheffler had arrived at the course around the same time in preparation for the tournament.', 'After reportedly attempting to drive around the scene of a fatal crash, Schefflerwas arrested and charged with a felony and other counts.', 'He was later released and has since teed off in the tournament.', 'Darlington was not only a witness to the incident, he also attempted to intervene.', 'He was only several feet away from Scheffler when the golfer was arrested, and Darlington tried – and failed – to explain to the police that Scheffler was a participant in the tournament.', '“We didn’t want to be part of this story, we ended up being at least on the periphery,” said ESPN commentator Dave Fleming on air after the incident.', 'ESPN told CNN that the network is not commenting on this story.', 'Darlington broke the news of Scheffler’s arrest in a series of posts on X and explained the incident in greater detail on ESPN’s SportsCenter less than an hour later.', 'He said the incident occurred around 6 a.m. after a “misunderstanding” in which Scheffler tried to circumvent police presence at the scene of an unrelated car accident that occurred outside of golf club.', '“The police officer attempted to attach himself to Scheffler’s car, and Scheffler then stopped his vehicle at the entrance to Valhalla,” Darlington wrote on X. “The police officer then began to scream at Scheffler to get out of the car.', 'When Scheffler exited the vehicle, the officer shoved Scheffler against the car and immediately placed him in handcuffs.”', '“At which point (Scheffler) - seeing me behind him - said ‘can you help?’', 'The police officers instructed me to step back,” Darlington told audiences on air shortly after.', 'In a video posted on X an hour later, Darlington follows the police officers as they lead Scheffler away.', 'Several police officers tell him to step back.', '“Right now he’s going to jail.', 'He’s going to jail and there’s nothing you can do about it.”', 'one officer told Darlington, referring to Scheffler.', 'Darlington clarifies that he’s a member of the media, and the police reiterate that he needs to step back.', '“The police officers around the patrol car in which Scottie Scheffler was in had no idea he was even Scottie Scheffler,” Darlington clarified on air. “', 'I say that because one police officer came up to me with his pad and said…can you tell me the name of the person who was just arrested.”', 'Darlington said that players were told they were allowed to enter the facility, and that Scheffler said that he kept driving past the police vehicle because he “didn’t know that he was a police officer.”', 'Scheffler was charged with second-degree assault on a police officer – a felony – along with lesser charges of third-degree criminal mischief, reckless driving and disregarding signals from officers directing traffic, according to Jefferson County court records.', 'He’s been released from jail, according to the Louisville Metro Department of Corrections.', 'Attorney Steve Romines, who represents Scheffler,told CNN affiliate WLKY that the golfer bypassed police because of a misunderstanding.', '“They were directing traffic, he held his media credential out and was going in like they’d been instructed to,” Romines said.', 'Scheffler’s attorney declined to comment on why the golfer was charged with assault, saying he will let the case play out in court.', 'The PGA Championship tournament was delayed by an hour and a half, and began at around 8:30 Friday morning.', '“This morningwe were devastated to learn that a worker with one of our vendors was tragically struck and killed by a shuttle bus outside Valhalla Golf Club,” PGA said in a statement. “', 'This is heartbreaking to all of us involved with the PGA Championship.', 'We extend our sincere condolences to their family and loved ones.”']",-0.1500214260299451,We extend our sincere condolences to their family and loved ones.”,"Scheffler was charged with second-degree assault on a police officer – a felony – along with lesser charges of third-degree criminal mischief, reckless driving and disregarding signals from officers directing traffic, according to Jefferson County court records.",-0.8828043639659882,,"“This morningwe were devastated to learn that a worker with one of our vendors was tragically struck and killed by a shuttle bus outside Valhalla Golf Club,” PGA said in a statement. “",2024-05-19 "Boeing whistleblower died by suicide, police investigation reveals",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/business/boeing-whistleblower-suicide-police-investigation/index.html," Published 9:36 PM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","Boeing whistleblower John Barnett died by suicide, according to a police report released on Friday, bringing to end an investigation of the shocking death of a longtime employee who raised concerns about the airplane manufacturer’s safety and production standards – and who sued the company, claiming Boeing illegally retaliated against him. Barnett, 62, was found dead in a vehicle on March 9 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound in Charleston, South Carolina. Officers had been dispatched to conduct a welfare check on Barnett at a Holiday Inn when he failed to show up to a deposition in his case against Boeing, according to his lawyers and a police incident report. When they arrived, responding officers found Barnett dead in the driver’s seat of a truck in the parking lot. He was holding a handgun. The initial police report also said there was a note in the truck. But Barnett’s lawyers said in a statement following his death that his deposition was nearing an end and he appeared to be in good spirits. “We didn’t see any indication he would take his own life. No one can believe it,” his lawyers, Robert Turkewitz and Brian Knowles, said in a statement on March 12. “The Charleston police need to investigate this fully and accurately and tell the public what they find out.” The Charleston Police Department on Friday concluded their investigation into Barnett’s death, saying the Charleston County Coroner’s Office determined that Barnett had killed himself. The investigation found that Barnett was shot in the head at close range and the weapon was found in his right hand. There was also a notebook found in the front seat of the car that showed signs that “he was going through a period of serious personal distress,” according to a media release about the police investigation. Police shared with CNN an image of a note left in the car, which had multiple disparaging messages directed at Boeing. “As this investigation comes to a close, we should not forget it represents the loss of Mr. Barnett’s life,” police said, “We extend our deepest sympathies to his family during this difficult time and hope they continue to find the strength to persevere in absence.” Boeing could not immediately be reached for comment. In March, the company said it was saddened by Barnett’s death. “Our thoughts are with his family and friends,” the company said. Barnett, a former quality manager who had worked at Boeing for decades, told the New York Times in 2019 that he had discovered unsafe wiring clusters in Boeing’s manufacturing processes that, if severed by nearby metal slivers, could have led to the catastrophic failure of an aircraft. “As a quality manager at Boeing, you’re the last line of defense before a defect makes it out to the flying public,” Barnett told the Times. “And I haven’t seen a plane out of Charleston yet that I’d put my name on saying it’s safe and airworthy.” In a statement sent to the plant’s employees and provided to CNN at the time, Brad Zaback, a site leader at the plant and general manager of the 787 program, said the Times’ report “paints a skewed and inaccurate picture of the program and of our team (at the plant).” Zaback, who said the Times declined an invitation to visit the plant, said “quality is the bedrock of who we are,” adding that the plant delivers “the highest quality airplanes.” Since Barnett’s initial public warnings about Boeing, the company has had several high-profile safety and quality lapses, including the blowout of a door plug on a 737 Max shortly after takeoff in January. That led the US Justice Department to announce this week that Boeing could face criminal prosecution for its history of safety problems.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['Boeing whistleblower John Barnett died by suicide, according to a police report released on Friday, bringing to end an investigation of the shocking death of a longtime employee who raised concerns about the airplane manufacturer’s safety and production standards – and who sued the company, claiming Boeing illegally retaliated against him.', 'Barnett, 62, was found dead in a vehicle on March 9 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound in Charleston, South Carolina.', 'Officers had been dispatched to conduct a welfare check on Barnett at a Holiday Inn when he failed to show up to a deposition in his case against Boeing, according to his lawyers and a police incident report.', 'When they arrived, responding officers found Barnett dead in the driver’s seat ofa truck in the parking lot.', 'He was holding a handgun.', 'The initial police report also said there was a note in the truck.', 'But Barnett’s lawyers said in a statement following his death that his deposition was nearing an end and he appeared to be in good spirits.', '“We didn’t see any indication he would take his own life.', 'No one can believe it,” his lawyers, Robert Turkewitz and Brian Knowles, said in a statement on March 12. “', 'The Charleston police need to investigate this fully and accurately and tell the public what they find out.”', 'The Charleston Police Department on Friday concluded their investigation into Barnett’s death, saying the Charleston County Coroner’s Office determined that Barnett had killed himself.', 'The investigation found that Barnett was shot in the head at close range and the weapon was found in his right hand.', 'There was also a notebook found in the front seat of the car that showed signs that “he was going through a period ofserious personal distress,” according to a media release about the police investigation.', 'Police shared with CNN an image of a note left in the car, which had multiple disparaging messages directed at Boeing.', '“As this investigation comes to a close, we should not forget it represents the loss of Mr. Barnett’s life,” police said, “We extend our deepest sympathies to his family during this difficult time and hope they continue to find the strength to persevere in absence.”', 'Boeing could not immediately be reached for comment.', 'In March, the company said it was saddened by Barnett’s death.', '“Our thoughts are with his family and friends,” the company said.', 'Barnett, a former quality manager who had worked at Boeing for decades, told the New York Times in 2019 that he had discovered unsafe wiring clusters in Boeing’s manufacturing processes that, if severed by nearby metal slivers, could have led to the catastrophic failure of an aircraft.', '“As a quality manager at Boeing, you’re the last line of defense before a defect makes it out to the flying public,” Barnett told the Times. “', 'And I haven’t seen a plane out of Charleston yet that I’d put my name on saying it’s safe and airworthy.”', 'In a statement sent to the plant’s employees and provided to CNN at the time, Brad Zaback, a site leader at the plant and general manager of the 787 program, said the Times’ report “paints a skewed and inaccurate picture of the program and of our team (at the plant).”', 'Zaback, who said the Times declined an invitation to visit the plant, said “quality is the bedrock of who we are,” adding that the plant delivers “the highest quality airplanes.”', 'Since Barnett’s initial public warnings about Boeing, the company has had several high-profile safety and quality lapses, including the blowout of a door plug on a 737 Max shortly after takeoff in January.', 'That led the US Justice Department to announce this week that Boeing could face criminal prosecution for its history of safety problems.']",-0.2033378449861339,"“As this investigation comes to a close, we should not forget it represents the loss of Mr. Barnett’s life,” police said, “We extend our deepest sympathies to his family during this difficult time and hope they continue to find the strength to persevere in absence.”","Boeing whistleblower John Barnett died by suicide, according to a police report released on Friday, bringing to end an investigation of the shocking death of a longtime employee who raised concerns about the airplane manufacturer’s safety and production standards – and who sued the company, claiming Boeing illegally retaliated against him.",-0.5364962716897329,But Barnett’s lawyers said in a statement following his death that his deposition was nearing an end and he appeared to be in good spirits.,"Since Barnett’s initial public warnings about Boeing, the company has had several high-profile safety and quality lapses, including the blowout of a door plug on a 737 Max shortly after takeoff in January.",2024-05-19 Taylor Swift’s ‘Eras Tour’ could be worth almost $1 billion to British economy,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/15/business/taylor-swift-uk-tour-one-billion-boost-economy/index.html," Published 9:20 AM EDT, Wed May 15, 2024 ","Taylor Swift’s smash-hit “Eras Tour” is set to boost spending in the United Kingdom by nearly $1 billion, according to estimates by Barclays. The British bank said in a report Wednesday that it expects nearly 1.2 million Swifties to attend the superstar’s shows in the UK this summer, with the typical fan expected to spend £642 ($810) on travel, accommodation and other expenses — injecting a total of £755 million ($953 million) into the economy. It is just the latest example of “Swiftonomics” — the musician’s ability to influence the economies of the cities and countries that she visits on her mammoth global tour, which kicked off in March last year in the United States. Fans are likely to fork out £121 ($153) for accommodation, £111 ($140) for travel and £59 ($74) in restaurants around the venues, according to Barclays, which based its estimates on customer transaction data and proprietary consumer research. Swift will perform 15 shows across four UK cities in England, Wales and Scotland in June and August. The concerts sold out within minutes of tickets going on sale, with fans spending £206 ($260) on average on a single ticket, Barclays said. Including the ticket price, UK concertgoers will spend, on average, £848 ($1,068) each, which is more than 12 times the average cost of a night out in the UK, according to Barclays’ research. While the price tag may seem hefty, it’s much less than many Americans will pay to see the “Eras Tour” back home. And it is well worth it for Swifties, says Dr Peter Brooks, chief behavioral scientist at Barclays. “When it comes to cultural icons like Taylor Swift — like we saw with Elvis and Beatlemania in the 50s and 60s — supporters have such a strong connection to the artist and to the rest of the fandom that the desire to spend becomes even more powerful,” Brooks wrote in the report. “For ‘Eras Tour’ ticketholders, every pound they spend is an investment in the memories they’ll create,” he added. Many Swifties are prepared to go to even greater lengths to see their idol live. Almost a fifth of Swift’s fans in the UK who responded to a survey commissioned by Barclays last month said they planned to travel to mainland Europe to see the singer perform. That’s “possibly due to ticket availability, cheaper travel and accommodation costs, or simply so that (fans) can combine the concert with (a) holiday or city break,” the bank wrote in its report. The European leg of the “Eras Tour” includes concerts in Sweden, Portugal, Spain, France, Ireland, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Italy, Germany, Poland and Austria this year. Some of Swift’s American fans are also choosing to travel overseas to see her perform. Even with flights and accommodation expenses factored in, the overall cost of attending one of Swift’s shows in Europe is often lower than in the United States, where ticket prices are much higher.",CNN,15/05/2024,"['Taylor Swift’s smash-hit “Eras Tour” is set to boost spending in the United Kingdom by nearly $1 billion, according to estimates by Barclays.', 'The British bank said in a report Wednesday that it expects nearly 1.2 million Swifties to attend the superstar’s shows in the UK this summer, with the typical fan expected to spend £642 ($810) on travel, accommodation and other expenses — injecting a total of £755 million ($953 million) into the economy.', 'It is just the latest example of “Swiftonomics” — the musician’s ability to influence the economies of the cities and countries that she visits on her mammoth global tour, which kicked off in March last year in the United States.', 'Fans are likely to fork out £121 ($153) for accommodation, £111 ($140) for travel and £59 ($74) in restaurants around the venues, according to Barclays, which based its estimates on customer transaction data and proprietary consumer research.', 'Swift will perform 15 shows across four UK cities in England, Wales and Scotland in June and August.', 'The concerts sold out within minutes of tickets going on sale, with fans spending £206 ($260) on average on a single ticket, Barclays said.', 'Including the ticket price, UK concertgoers will spend, on average, £848 ($1,068) each, which is more than 12 times the average cost of a night out in the UK, according to Barclays’ research.', 'While the price tag may seem hefty, it’s much less than many Americans will pay to see the “Eras Tour” back home.', 'And it is well worth it for Swifties, says Dr Peter Brooks, chief behavioral scientist at Barclays.', '“When it comes to cultural icons like Taylor Swift — like we saw with Elvis and Beatlemania in the 50s and 60s — supporters have such a strong connection to the artist and to the rest of the fandom that the desire to spend becomes even more powerful,” Brooks wrote in the report.', '“For ‘Eras Tour’ ticketholders, every pound they spend is an investment in the memories they’ll create,” he added.', 'Many Swifties are prepared to go to even greater lengths to see their idol live.', 'Almost a fifth of Swift’s fans in the UK who responded to a survey commissioned by Barclays last month said they planned to travel to mainland Europe to see the singer perform.', 'That’s “possibly due to ticket availability, cheaper travel and accommodation costs, or simply so that (fans) can combine the concert with (a) holiday or city break,” the bank wrote in its report.', 'The European leg of the “Eras Tour” includes concerts in Sweden, Portugal, Spain, France, Ireland, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Italy, Germany, Poland and Austria this year.', 'Some of Swift’s American fans are also choosing to travel overseas to see her perform.', 'Even with flights and accommodation expenses factored in, the overall cost of attending one of Swift’s shows in Europe is often lower than in the United States, where ticket prices are much higher.']",0.3024124116444155,"“When it comes to cultural icons like Taylor Swift — like we saw with Elvis and Beatlemania in the 50s and 60s — supporters have such a strong connection to the artist and to the rest of the fandom that the desire to spend becomes even more powerful,” Brooks wrote in the report.",,0.9894361793994904,"Taylor Swift’s smash-hit “Eras Tour” is set to boost spending in the United Kingdom by nearly $1 billion, according to estimates by Barclays.",,2024-05-19 Cuba laments collapse of iconic sugar industry,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-68935247,2024-05-18T00:34:58.000Z,"The men of the Yumuri sugar co-operative in Cuba have worked the cane fields around the city of Cienfuegos since they were old enough to wield a machete. Cutting cane is all Miguel Guzmán has ever known. He comes from a family of farm hands and started the tough, thankless work as a teenager. For hundreds of years, sugar was the mainstay of the Cuban economy. It was not just the island's main export but also the cornerstone of another national industry, rum. Older Cubans remember when the island was essentially built on the backs of families like Mr Guzmán's. Today, though, he readily admits he has never seen the sugar industry as broken and depressed as it is now - not even when the Soviet Union's lucrative sugar quotas dried up after the Cold War. Spiralling inflation, shortages of basic goods and the decades-long US economic embargo have made for a dire economic outlook across the board in Cuba. But things are particularly bleak in the sugar trade. ""There's not enough trucks and the fuel shortages mean sometimes several days pass before we can work,"" says Miguel, waiting in a tiny patch of shade for the Soviet-era lorries to arrive. The lost hours of harvest as men and machinery lie idle have acutely hurt production levels. Last season, Cuba's production fell to just 350,000 tonnes of raw sugar, an all-time low for the country, and well below the 1.3 million tonnes recorded in 2019. Miguel is one of the fastest cutters in his team - or pelotón - recognised by his bosses as among the most efficient in the country. Yet he says he receives no financial incentive for greater production beyond his love of the trade. ""My wages barely buy anything anymore,"" he says with no hint of exaggeration over the worsening inflation in the country. ""But what can we do? Cuba needs the sugar."" It certainly does: Cuba now imports sugar to meet domestic demand - once unthinkable, and a far cry from the glory years when Cuban sugar was the envy of the Caribbean and exported around the world. Inside Ciudad Caracas, a 19th-Century sugar mill near Cienfuegos, the air is thick with the overpowering smell of molasses. As obsolete, rusting cogs grind tonnes of sugarcane into pulp and juice, the workers tell me it is one of just two dozen working sugar mills in Cuba. ""That's four more than originally planned for this season, thanks to the hard work and effort of the workers,"" says Dionis Pérez, communications director of the state-run sugar company, Azcuba. ""But the other 29 are at a standstill,"" he acknowledges. ""It's a disaster. Today the sugar industry in Cuba almost doesn't exist,"" says Juan Triana of the Centre for Studies of the Cuban Economy in Havana. The slump in sugar has serious implications for other parts of the Cuban economy, he argues, including on its export earnings from rum. ""We're producing the same quantity of sugar Cuba produced in the middle of the 19th Century."" The problems have undoubtedly been worsened by the ""maximum pressure"" policy brought in by former US President Donald Trump. His administration ratcheted up the trade embargo on the island, a measure later extended by President Joe Biden. But the issues facing Cuban sugar are not solely the fault of the US embargo. Years of chronic mismanagement and underinvestment have also wrecked the once-thriving industry. Today, sugar receives less than 3% of state investment as the Cuban government backs tourism as its main economic motor instead. One man who can still get his hands on enough sugar is Martin Nizarane. Part of a new breed of Cuban private entrepreneurs, his company Clamanta produces yoghurt and ice cream in a factory outside Havana. As Mr Nizarane shows me sacks of sugar imported in bulk from Colombia, he says he hopes to double production soon. The business has been hailed by Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel as a model for the future. That praise from the top, to many, amounts to a paradigm shift. It may still be considered a dirty word by the Cuban state but this is capitalism pure and simple, even if Martin Nizarane displays his revolutionary credentials by adorning his office with photographs of him hugging the late revolutionary leader, Fidel Castro. I put it to him that only people with close ties to the Cuban Communist Party can own a private business as sophisticated as his. He was quick to deny it. ""I am not an employee of the Cuban state. This is a non-state form of production which sells to both other non-state entities and state-owned companies,"" he retorts. ""The state treats me like just another private entrepreneur with no special privileges whatsoever."" Sugar's demise is just one part of Cuba's faltering economy. On 1 March, amid growing inflation, the government imposed a five-fold price increase on subsidised fuel at the petrol pumps. It was a difficult but overdue decision, officials said, arguing the government could no longer afford such high subsidies on fuel. As he queued to fill up his tank on the day the new prices came into force, Manuel Domínguez said he was not convinced. All he knows is that the measure is hurting drivers like him, and that Cubans are suffering now more than he can ever recall. ""There's no relationship between what we earn and the prices we see - whether that's fuel or food in the shops or anything else."" ""There needs to be a correlation between our wages and what things cost because, right now, for the average Cuban, fuel is simply unaffordable."" A few days later, economy and planning minister Alejandro Gil Fernández was arrested for alleged corruption. Some think he has been made a scapegoat for the state of the Cuban economy. Either way, it was an extraordinary - and very public - fall from grace. But most think it will take much more than one ministerial head to roll to pull Cuba from its economic woes. Back in the sugarcane fields of Cienfuegos, the cutters carry out their gruelling work with little optimism. Invariably, when talking about the sugar industry in Cuba, someone will quote the island's famous refrain: ""Without sugar, there's no country."" For Cuban economist Juan Triana that idea is being tested to its limit. A quintessential part of the national identity - part of the island's very DNA - is being eroded before Cubans' eyes. ""For more than maybe 150 years, the industry of the sugarcane was both the main export income and the locomotive for the rest of the economy. That's what we've lost."" ",BBC,18/05/2024,"['The men of the Yumuri sugar co-operative in Cuba have worked the cane fields around the city of Cienfuegos since they were old enough to wield a machete.', 'Cutting cane is all Miguel Guzmán has ever known.', 'He comes from a family of farm hands and started the tough, thankless work as a teenager.', 'For hundreds of years, sugar was the mainstay of the Cuban economy.', ""It was not just the island's main export but also the cornerstone of another national industry, rum."", ""Older Cubans remember when the island was essentially built on the backs of families like Mr Guzmán's."", ""Today, though, he readily admits he has never seen the sugar industry as broken and depressed as it is now - not even when the Soviet Union's lucrative sugar quotas dried up after the Cold War."", 'Spiralling inflation, shortages of basic goods and the decades-long US economic embargo have made for a dire economic outlook across the board in Cuba.', 'But things are particularly bleak in the sugar trade. ""', 'There\'s not enough trucks and the fuel shortages mean sometimes several days pass before we can work,"" says Miguel, waiting in a tiny patch of shade for the Soviet-era lorries to arrive.', 'The lost hours of harvest as men and machinery lie idle have acutely hurt production levels.', ""Last season, Cuba's production fell to just 350,000 tonnes of raw sugar, an all-time low for the country, and well below the 1.3 million tonnes recorded in 2019."", 'Miguel is one of the fastest cutters in his team - or pelotón - recognised by his bosses as among the most efficient in the country.', 'Yet he says he receives no financial incentive for greater production beyond his love of the trade. ""', 'My wages barely buy anything anymore,"" he says with no hint of exaggeration over the worsening inflation in the country. ""', 'But what can we do?', 'Cuba needs the sugar.""', 'It certainly does: Cuba now imports sugar to meet domestic demand - once unthinkable, and a far cry from the glory years when Cuban sugar was the envy of the Caribbean and exported around the world.', 'Inside Ciudad Caracas, a 19th-Century sugar mill near Cienfuegos, the air is thick with the overpowering smell of molasses.', 'As obsolete, rusting cogs grind tonnes of sugarcane into pulp and juice, the workers tell me it is one of just two dozen working sugar mills in Cuba. ""', 'That\'s four more than originally planned for this season, thanks to the hard work and effort of the workers,"" says Dionis Pérez, communications director of the state-run sugar company, Azcuba. ""', 'But the other 29 are at a standstill,"" he acknowledges. ""', ""It's a disaster."", 'Today the sugar industry in Cuba almost doesn\'t exist,"" says Juan Triana of the Centre for Studies of the Cuban Economy in Havana.', 'The slump in sugar has serious implications for other parts of the Cuban economy, he argues, including on its export earnings from rum. ""', 'We\'re producing the same quantity of sugar Cuba produced in the middle of the 19th Century.""', 'The problems have undoubtedly been worsened by the ""maximum pressure"" policy brought in by former US President Donald Trump.', 'His administration ratcheted up the trade embargo on the island, a measure later extended by President Joe Biden.', 'But the issues facing Cuban sugar are not solely the fault of the US embargo.', 'Years of chronic mismanagement and underinvestment have also wrecked the once-thriving industry.', 'Today, sugar receives less than 3% of state investment as the Cuban government backs tourism as its main economic motor instead.', 'One man who can still get his hands on enough sugar is Martin Nizarane.', 'Part of a new breed of Cuban private entrepreneurs, his company Clamanta produces yoghurt and ice cream in a factory outside Havana.', 'As Mr Nizarane shows me sacks of sugar imported in bulk from Colombia, he says he hopes to double production soon.', 'The business has been hailed by Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel as a model for the future.', 'That praise from the top, to many, amounts to a paradigm shift.', 'It may still be considered a dirty word by the Cuban state but this is capitalism pure and simple, even if Martin Nizarane displays his revolutionary credentials by adorning his office with photographs of him hugging the late revolutionary leader, Fidel Castro.', 'I put it to him that only people with close ties to the Cuban Communist Party can own a private business as sophisticated as his.', 'He was quick to deny it. ""', 'I am not an employee of the Cuban state.', 'This is a non-state form of production which sells to both other non-state entities and state-owned companies,"" he retorts. ""', 'The state treats me like just another private entrepreneur with no special privileges whatsoever.""', ""Sugar's demise is just one part of Cuba's faltering economy."", 'On 1 March, amid growing inflation, the government imposed a five-fold price increase on subsidised fuel at the petrol pumps.', 'It was a difficult but overdue decision, officials said, arguing the government could no longer afford such high subsidies on fuel.', 'As he queued to fill up his tank on the day the new prices came into force, Manuel Domínguez said he was not convinced.', 'All he knows is that the measure is hurting drivers like him, and that Cubans are suffering now more than he can ever recall. ""', 'There\'s no relationship between what we earn and the prices we see - whether that\'s fuel or food in the shops or anything else."" ""', 'There needs to be a correlation between our wages and what things cost because, right now, for the average Cuban, fuel is simply unaffordable.""', 'A few days later, economy and planning minister Alejandro Gil Fernández was arrested for alleged corruption.', 'Some think he has been made a scapegoat for the state of the Cuban economy.', 'Either way, it was an extraordinary - and very public - fall from grace.', 'But most think it will take much more than one ministerial head to roll to pull Cuba from its economic woes.', 'Back in the sugarcane fields of Cienfuegos, the cutters carry out their gruelling work with little optimism.', 'Invariably, when talking about the sugar industry in Cuba, someone will quote the island\'s famous refrain: ""Without sugar, there\'s no country.""', 'For Cuban economist Juan Triana that idea is being tested to its limit.', 'A quintessential part of the national identity - part of the island\'s very DNA - is being eroded before Cubans\' eyes. ""', 'For more than maybe 150 years, the industry of the sugarcane was both the main export income and the locomotive for the rest of the economy.', 'That\'s what we\'ve lost.""']",-0.0434389662663717,"Yet he says he receives no financial incentive for greater production beyond his love of the trade. ""","Today, though, he readily admits he has never seen the sugar industry as broken and depressed as it is now - not even when the Soviet Union's lucrative sugar quotas dried up after the Cold War.",-0.3149136652549107,"That's four more than originally planned for this season, thanks to the hard work and effort of the workers,"" says Dionis Pérez, communications director of the state-run sugar company, Azcuba. ""","Spiralling inflation, shortages of basic goods and the decades-long US economic embargo have made for a dire economic outlook across the board in Cuba.",2024-05-19 "Dow closes above 40,000 for first time ever",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/markets/dow-closes-above-40-000/index.html," Updated 4:30 PM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above the 40,000 mark Friday for the first time in its 139-year history. The blue-chip index initially crossed the key threshold early Thursday but ended that day lower. Wall Street has been boosted in recent days by renewed hopes of rate cuts from the Federal Reserve that would loosen monetary conditions for consumers and businesses. A report this week from the Bureau of Labor Statistics indicated that inflation has started to ease, potentially paving the way for the central bank to start implementing the rate cut that investors have been expecting since the start of the year. “40,000 is a great milestone, but end of the day there isn’t much difference between 39,999 and 40k,” said Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group, in a note Friday. “Still, this is a great reminder of how far we’ve come. Think about how many people were talking about recessions and bear markets all of last year. Now we are once again back to new highs.” “Investors who were patient and ignored all the scary headlines were once again rewarded, just as they have been throughout history,” he wrote. All major indexes closed the week higher, but markets were mixed on Friday. The Dow rose 134 points, or 0.3%, to close at a record high of 40,003.59. This is the Dow’s fifth consecutive winning week. The S&P 500 gained 0.1% and the Nasdaq Composite closed 0.1% lower. Crossing the 40,000 level doesn’t hold much practical value for investors, but it does catch the attention of the public and, some argue, it could help propel that optimistic sentiment beyond Wall Street. “The Dow 40,000 milestone also shows how resilient the US economy has been, at a time where there was a plethora of calls for a recession,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Financial, in a recent note to CNN. “The overarching importance of crossing these big round numbers is that it brings Wall Street news to Main Street, at least for a day. It also serves as an affirmation that corporate earnings are growing, and that investor confidence remains robust,” he said. To many Americans, “the Dow” simply means the stock market. The index’s small cache of stocks — ranging from Microsoft to McDonald’s to Chevron — represents some of the largest companies in the nation and are widely held among retail and institutional investors alike. Here are some important stops along the Dow’s road to 40,000: Dow is formed: The first daily close, on May 26, 1896, was 40.94. The Dow did not get off to a good start, plunging 30% to an all-time low of 28.48 by August that year. Dow 100: The Dow first closed in triple digits in January 1906. That marked an impressive rally for the average, which had hit an all-time low when Teddy Roosevelt was president. The Federal Reserve would not be created for seven more years. Crash of 1929: The Dow fell 38 points on Oct. 28 and 31 more points the next day. That might not sound bad today, but it represented back-to-back declines of 13% and 12% of the Dow’s value. They are still two of the worst one-day percentage declines in the index’s history. Dow 1,000: Nov. 14, 1972. Richard Nixon had just won reelection by taking 49 states. The Dow’s components, which had been unchanged for 13 years, included Woolworth, Eastman Kodak and International Nickel. Crash of 1987: On Oct. 19, the Dow plunged 508 points, a 23% drop that is still the largest one-day percentage decline in history. A week later it took an 8% plunge. But the damage was short-lived: Within a year, the Dow was back to pre-crash levels. Dow 10,000: March 29, 1999. The “irrational exuberance” of the tech bubble was in full swing as the Dow gained 1,000 points in less than a year to hit this benchmark. It gained 1,000 more points in just the next month. A year later, the dot-com stock bubble burst, sending the Dow down nearly 30% by September 2001. Meltdown of 2008-2009: The financial crisis caused the Dow to lose about half its value in less than a year, bottoming out to close at 6,547 on March 9, 2009. The worst day was Sept. 29, 2008, when the Dow lost what was then a record 778 points after Congress rejected a $700 billion bank bailout. The bailout was later approved. Dow 15,000: May 7, 2013. As the economy continued to recover from the Great Recession, the Dow had one of the current bull market’s strongest periods. It crossed the 15,000 mark and finished the year up 26.5%, marking the best full-year performance of the current bull market. The Dow nearly matched that in 2017, rising 25%. Dow 20,000: January 25, 2017. The stock market had enjoyed a nice run starting on the day after the 2016 election, with the Dow gaining nearly 10% as investors looked forward to lower taxes and less regulation under the Trump administration. Dow 25,000: Jan. 4, 2018. The passage of the Trump tax cuts, especially the lowering of the corporate tax rate in December 2017, helped feed the quick move between 20,000 and 25,000. Dow 30,000: Nov. 24, 2020: Covid sent the stock market plunging in the spring of 2020. But new hopes of a vaccine and the results of the presidential election ended an era of uncertainty on Wall Street, sending the stock market rolling once again.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above the 40,000 mark Friday for the first time in its 139-year history.', 'The blue-chip index initially crossed the key threshold early Thursday but ended that day lower.', 'Wall Street has been boosted in recent days by renewed hopes of rate cuts from the Federal Reserve that would loosen monetary conditions for consumers and businesses.', 'A report this week from the Bureau of Labor Statistics indicated that inflation has started to ease, potentially paving the way for the central bank to start implementing the rate cut that investors have been expecting since the start of the year.', '“40,000is a great milestone, but end of the day there isn’t much difference between 39,999 and 40k,” said Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group, in a note Friday. “', 'Still, this is a great reminder of how far we’ve come.', 'Think about how many people were talking about recessions and bear markets all of last year.', 'Now we are once again back to new highs.”', '“Investors who were patient and ignored all the scary headlines were once again rewarded, just as they have been throughout history,” he wrote.', 'All major indexes closed the week higher, but markets were mixed on Friday.', 'The Dow rose 134 points, or 0.3%, to close at a record high of 40,003.59.', 'This is the Dow’s fifth consecutive winning week.', 'The S&P 500 gained 0.1% and the Nasdaq Composite closed 0.1% lower.', 'Crossing the 40,000 leveldoesn’t hold much practical value for investors,but it does catch the attention of the public and, some argue, it could help propel that optimistic sentiment beyond Wall Street.', '“The Dow 40,000 milestone also shows how resilient the US economy has been, at a time where there was a plethora of calls for a recession,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Financial, in a recent note to CNN.', '“The overarching importance of crossing these big round numbers is that it brings Wall Street news to Main Street, at least for a day.', 'It also serves as an affirmation that corporate earnings are growing, and that investor confidence remains robust,” he said.', 'To many Americans, “the Dow” simply means the stock market.', 'The index’s small cache of stocks — ranging from Microsoft to McDonald’s to Chevron — represents some of the largest companies in the nation and are widely held among retail and institutional investors alike.', 'Here are some important stops along the Dow’s road to 40,000: Dow is formed:The first daily close, on May 26, 1896, was 40.94.', 'The Dow did not get off to a good start, plunging 30% to an all-time low of 28.48 by August that year.', 'Dow 100:The Dow first closed in triple digits in January 1906.', 'That marked an impressive rally for the average, which had hit an all-time low when Teddy Roosevelt was president.', 'The Federal Reserve would not be created for seven more years.', 'Crash of 1929:The Dow fell 38 points on Oct. 28 and 31 more points the next day.', 'That might not sound bad today, but it represented back-to-back declines of 13% and 12% of the Dow’s value.', 'They are still two of the worst one-day percentage declines in the index’s history.', 'Dow 1,000:Nov. 14, 1972.', 'Richard Nixon had just won reelection by taking 49 states.', 'The Dow’s components, which had been unchanged for 13 years, included Woolworth, Eastman Kodak and International Nickel.', 'Crash of 1987:On Oct. 19, the Dow plunged 508 points, a 23% drop that is still the largest one-day percentage decline in history.', 'A week later it took an 8% plunge.', 'But the damage was short-lived: Within a year, the Dow was back to pre-crash levels.', 'Dow 10,000:March 29, 1999.', 'The “irrational exuberance” of the tech bubble was in full swing as the Dow gained 1,000 points in less than a year to hit this benchmark.', 'It gained 1,000 more points in just the next month.', 'A year later, the dot-com stock bubble burst, sending the Dow down nearly 30% by September 2001.', 'Meltdown of 2008-2009:The financial crisis caused the Dow to lose about half its value in less than a year, bottoming out to close at 6,547 on March 9, 2009.', 'The worst day was Sept. 29, 2008, when the Dow lost what was then a record 778 points after Congress rejected a $700 billion bank bailout.', 'The bailout was later approved.', 'Dow 15,000:May 7, 2013.', 'As the economy continued to recover from the Great Recession, the Dow had one of the current bull market’s strongest periods.', 'It crossed the 15,000 mark and finished the year up 26.5%, marking the best full-year performance of the current bull market.', 'The Dow nearly matched that in 2017, rising 25%.', 'Dow 20,000:January 25, 2017.', 'The stock market had enjoyed a nice run starting on the day after the 2016 election, with the Dow gaining nearly 10% as investors looked forward to lower taxes and less regulation under the Trump administration.', 'Dow 25,000:Jan. 4, 2018.', 'The passage of the Trump tax cuts, especially the lowering of the corporate tax rate in December 2017, helped feed the quick move between 20,000 and 25,000.', 'Dow 30,000:Nov. 24, 2020: Covid sent the stock market plunging in the spring of 2020.', 'But new hopes of a vaccine and the results of the presidential election ended an era of uncertainty on Wall Street, sending the stock market rolling once again.']",0.0555875297815642,"The stock market had enjoyed a nice run starting on the day after the 2016 election, with the Dow gaining nearly 10% as investors looked forward to lower taxes and less regulation under the Trump administration.","The worst day was Sept. 29, 2008, when the Dow lost what was then a record 778 points after Congress rejected a $700 billion bank bailout.",0.2731890783590429,"The stock market had enjoyed a nice run starting on the day after the 2016 election, with the Dow gaining nearly 10% as investors looked forward to lower taxes and less regulation under the Trump administration.","The Dow did not get off to a good start, plunging 30% to an all-time low of 28.48 by August that year.",2024-05-19 Boeing boss's $33m pay package approved,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c72pv86n5r3o,2024-05-17T17:16:00.578Z,"Boeing shareholders have signed off on the plane-maker's plan to grant outgoing boss Dave Calhoun a 2023 pay package worth nearly $33m (£25m). A majority voted in favour of the plan, which had drawn criticism as the company grapples with a crisis sparked by the mid-air blowout of a panel on one of its planes in January. Such pay votes, held at the company's annual meetings, are not binding. A breakdown of the vote was not immediately available. Ahead of the meeting, at least one prominent shareholder advisory group had criticised the plan and it also drew attention from some investors who spoke at the event. The firm's decision to keep outgoing boss Dave Calhoun on the company's board of directors had raised questions as well, but was also approved. Mr Calhoun's compensation package included salary of $1.4m (£1.1m) and stock awards worth about $30m (£23m) when granted. That compared to a package of roughly $22.6m (£17m) in 2022. In a question-and answer session after the vote, the firm was asked how the compensation for Mr Calhoun and others were ""justified"" given the severe challenges now facing the company. New board chairman Steve Mollenkopf said the board had reduced some 2024 awards for executives after the accident and moved swiftly to overhaul the design of its pay incentives. That included giving product safety the primary weight in determining performance, instead of financial factors - such as cash flow and share price - as had been the case previously, he said. But both he and Mr Calhoun acknowledged the strains facing the company, some of which Mr Calhoun described as ""potentially existential"" in nature. The Alaska Airlines incident revived questions about the firm's manufacturing and safety procedures and has spawned numerous investigations and lawsuits. Just days ago, the US Department of Justice (DOJ) said it was considering whether to prosecute Boeing over deadly crashes involving its 737 Max aircraft in 2018 and 2019, after determining it had breached a deal that shielded it from criminal charges. In March, Boeing said Mr Calhoun would step down by the end of the year. The search for his replacement is a key focus of the company now, Mr Mollenkopf said. ""The months and years ahead are critically important for our company as we take the necessary steps to regain the trust lost in recent times,"" he said. In putting the pay package to shareholders earlier this year, the company praised how Mr Calhoun had steered the company through challenges such as Covid since 2020. It said he had responded to the Alaska Airlines blowout ""in the right way"". ""The 737 MAX accidents and COVID have combined to create tremendous stress on the Company’s manufacturing operations and supply chain,"" it said. ""However, the Board believes that Mr. Calhoun’s primary focus on safety, quality and transparency is exactly what Boeing has needed, and continues to need."" ",BBC,17/05/2024,"[""Boeing shareholders have signed off on the plane-maker's plan to grant outgoing boss Dave Calhoun a 2023 pay package worth nearly $33m (£25m)."", 'A majority voted in favour of the plan, which had drawn criticism as the company grapples with a crisis sparked by the mid-air blowout of a panel on one of its planes in January.', ""Such pay votes, held at the company's annual meetings, are not binding."", 'A breakdown of the vote was not immediately available.', 'Ahead of the meeting, at least one prominent shareholder advisory group had criticised the plan and it also drew attention from some investors who spoke at the event.', ""The firm's decision to keep outgoing boss Dave Calhoun on the company's board of directors had raised questions as well, but was also approved."", ""Mr Calhoun's compensation package included salary of $1.4m (£1.1m) and stock awards worth about $30m (£23m) when granted."", 'That compared to a package of roughly $22.6m (£17m) in 2022.', 'In a question-and answer session after the vote, the firm was asked how the compensation for Mr Calhoun and others were ""justified"" given the severe challenges now facing the company.', 'New board chairman Steve Mollenkopf said the board had reduced some 2024 awards for executives after the accident and moved swiftly to overhaul the design of its pay incentives.', 'That included giving product safety the primary weight in determining performance, instead of financial factors - such as cash flow and share price - as had been the case previously, he said.', 'But both he and Mr Calhoun acknowledged the strains facing the company, some of which Mr Calhoun described as ""potentially existential"" in nature.', ""The Alaska Airlines incident revived questions about the firm's manufacturing and safety procedures and has spawned numerous investigations and lawsuits."", 'Just days ago, the US Department of Justice (DOJ) said it was considering whether to prosecute Boeing over deadly crashes involving its 737 Max aircraft in 2018 and 2019, after determining it had breached a deal that shielded it from criminal charges.', 'In March, Boeing said Mr Calhoun would step down by the end of the year.', 'The search for his replacement is a key focus of the company now, Mr Mollenkopf said. ""', 'The months and years ahead are critically important for our company as we take the necessary steps to regain the trust lost in recent times,"" he said.', 'In putting the pay package to shareholders earlier this year, the company praised how Mr Calhoun had steered the company through challenges such as Covid since 2020.', 'It said he had responded to the Alaska Airlines blowout ""in the right way"". ""', 'The 737 MAX accidents and COVID have combined to create tremendous stress on the Company’s manufacturing operations and supply chain,"" it said. ""', 'However, the Board believes that Mr. Calhoun’s primary focus on safety, quality and transparency is exactly what Boeing has needed, and continues to need.""']",0.1241324687216989,"That included giving product safety the primary weight in determining performance, instead of financial factors - such as cash flow and share price - as had been the case previously, he said.","A majority voted in favour of the plan, which had drawn criticism as the company grapples with a crisis sparked by the mid-air blowout of a panel on one of its planes in January.",0.0022622227668762,Boeing shareholders have signed off on the plane-maker's plan to grant outgoing boss Dave Calhoun a 2023 pay package worth nearly $33m (£25m).,"The 737 MAX accidents and COVID have combined to create tremendous stress on the Company’s manufacturing operations and supply chain,"" it said. """,2024-05-19 China unveils ‘historic’ rescue for crisis-hit property sector as home prices slump again,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/economy/china-rescue-measures-housing-market-intl-hnk/index.html," Published 7:20 AM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","China has unveiled wide-ranging measures to rescue its property sector, including asking local governments across the country to buy unsold homes from beleagured developers and easing rules on purchases. Even though China’s economy expanded faster than expected at the start of this year, growth is being weighed down by the all-important real estate sector, which once accounted for as much as 30% of economic activity. He Lifeng, vice premier and the Communist Party’s top economic official, said Friday that municipal governments should buy unsold homes and convert them into affordable social housing, in a plan that has been trailed as a major solution for the country’s crisis-ridden property sector. In a coordinated move, the People’s China of China (PBOC) announced that it will set up a nationwide program to provide 300 billion yuan ($41.5 billion) in loans to fund state purchases of unsold homes. Tao Ling, deputy governor of the central bank, said at a press conference in Beijing that it will encourage commercials banks to support local state-owned enterprises to buy unsold homes and turn them into social housing. The 300 billion yuan provided by the central bank could eventually underpin 500 billion yuan ($69 billion) worth of credit to support such purchases, she estimated. Expectations that Beijing was preparing a plan to have local governments across the country buy millions of unsold homes have successfully buoyed China stocks. Investors have been steadily pouring money back into Chinese shares since last month. China Real Estate Business, a newspaper run by the country’s housing ministry, described the measures as “heavyweight policies” that marked a “significant historic moment” for the real estate sector. Larry Hu, chief China economist at Macquarie Group, said the move to buy unsold homes was “positive” for the industry, but that the plan was missing key details such as how much would be funded. “Looking ahead, the key is when and at what scale the central government can provide a funding source,” he wrote in a Friday research note. China’s local governments have already racked up $15 trillion in debt, much of it hidden, having borrowed heavily in recent years to cover the cost of pandemic-related spending and infrastructure projects. Over the past two years, the Chinese authorities have introduced many measures to revive the depressed real estate sector — to little avail. Analysts have long been calling on them to do much more. Friday’s sweeping rescue measures come as new data suggested the property downturn worsened in April. Government data published Friday showed that property investment declined 9.8% in the first four months of 2024, accelerating from the 9.5% fall recorded in the first quarter. New property sales plunged 28.3% in the January-to-April period, compared with a 27.6% drop in January-March. New home prices fell for a 10th consecutive month by 0.6% month-on-month in April, the fastest decline since November 2014, according to Reuters. “All this bad news seems to have finally triggered a sense of urgency that’s strong enough to force material action,” analysts from Société Générale wrote in a note on Friday. The analysts were referring to the government’s announcement, PBOC cuts to mortgage rates and the first batch in the sale of one trillion yuan ($138 billion) of ultra-long Treasury bonds on Friday. On Friday, He also urged local governments to buy back or directly purchase land that has been sold to developers but not yet used. The move would help ease financial difficulties of property companies. In China, land is mostly owned by the state. The government can sell the rights to use the land to property developers, which is a significant source of fiscal revenue. The PBOC also made major additional moves to rescue the housing market. It effectively allowed banks to set their own mortgage rates, removing a nationwide minimum; cut the minimum down-payment ratio for first-time buyers to 15% and 25% for second-home buyers; and lowered the interest rates for housing provident fund loans by 0.25 percentage points, according to three separate statements by the central bank.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['China has unveiled wide-ranging measures to rescue its property sector, including asking local governments across the country to buy unsold homes from beleagured developers and easing rules on purchases.', 'Even though China’s economy expanded faster than expected at the start of this year, growth is being weighed down by the all-important real estate sector, which once accounted for as much as 30% of economic activity.', 'He Lifeng, vice premier and the Communist Party’s top economic official, said Friday that municipal governments should buy unsold homes and convert them into affordable social housing, in a plan that has been trailed as a major solution for the country’s crisis-ridden property sector.', 'In a coordinated move, the People’s China of China (PBOC) announced that it will set up a nationwide program to provide 300 billion yuan ($41.5 billion) in loans to fund state purchases of unsold homes.', 'Tao Ling, deputy governor of the central bank, said at a press conference in Beijing that it will encourage commercials banks to support local state-owned enterprises to buy unsold homes and turn them into social housing.', 'The 300 billion yuan provided by the central bank could eventually underpin 500 billion yuan ($69 billion) worth of credit to support such purchases, she estimated.', 'Expectations that Beijing was preparing a plan to have local governments across the country buy millions of unsold homes have successfully buoyed China stocks.', 'Investors have been steadily pouring money back into Chinese shares since last month.', 'China Real Estate Business, a newspaper run by the country’s housing ministry, described the measures as “heavyweight policies” that marked a “significant historic moment” for the real estate sector.', 'Larry Hu, chief China economist at Macquarie Group, said the move to buy unsold homes was “positive” for the industry, but that the plan was missing key details such as how much would be funded.', '“Looking ahead, the key iswhen and at what scale the central government can provide a funding source,” he wrote in a Friday research note.', 'China’s local governments have already racked up $15 trillion in debt, much of it hidden, having borrowed heavily in recent years to cover the cost of pandemic-related spending and infrastructure projects.', 'Over the past two years, the Chinese authorities have introduced many measures to revive the depressed real estate sector — to little avail.', 'Analysts have long been calling on them to do much more.', 'Friday’s sweeping rescue measures come as new data suggested the property downturn worsened in April.', 'Government data published Friday showed that property investment declined 9.8% in the first four months of 2024, accelerating from the 9.5% fall recorded in the first quarter.', 'New property sales plunged 28.3% in the January-to-April period, compared with a 27.6% drop in January-March.', 'New home pricesfellfor a 10th consecutive month by 0.6% month-on-month in April, the fastest decline since November 2014, according to Reuters.', '“All this bad news seems to have finally triggered a sense of urgency that’s strong enough to force material action,” analysts from Société Générale wrote in a note on Friday.', 'The analysts were referring to the government’s announcement, PBOC cuts to mortgage rates and the first batch in the sale of one trillion yuan ($138 billion) of ultra-long Treasury bonds on Friday.', 'On Friday, He also urged local governments to buy back or directly purchase land that has been sold to developers but not yet used.', 'The move would help ease financial difficulties of property companies.', 'In China, land is mostly owned by the state.', 'The government can sell the rights to use the land to property developers, which is a significant source of fiscal revenue.', 'The PBOC also made major additional moves to rescue the housing market.', 'It effectively allowed banks to set their own mortgage rates, removing a nationwide minimum; cut the minimum down-payment ratio for first-time buyers to 15% and 25% for second-home buyers; and lowered the interest rates for housing provident fund loans by 0.25 percentage points, according to three separate statements by the central bank.']",0.1735151585001815,"The 300 billion yuan provided by the central bank could eventually underpin 500 billion yuan ($69 billion) worth of credit to support such purchases, she estimated.","China’s local governments have already racked up $15 trillion in debt, much of it hidden, having borrowed heavily in recent years to cover the cost of pandemic-related spending and infrastructure projects.",0.1097166165709495,Expectations that Beijing was preparing a plan to have local governments across the country buy millions of unsold homes have successfully buoyed China stocks.,"New property sales plunged 28.3% in the January-to-April period, compared with a 27.6% drop in January-March.",2024-05-19 Top soccer clubs are using an AI-powered app to scout future stars,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/01/tech/aiscout-app-soccer-scouting-spc-intl/index.html," Published 7:14 AM EST, Fri March 1, 2024 ","A London-based technology company is looking to “democratize” talent-identification and scouting in soccer using a mobile app. Free to download and available globally, the aiScout app allows aspiring soccer stars to enter virtual trials for professional clubs by uploading self-recorded footage of themselves completing a series of drills. It offers 75 exercises, designed to test a range of skills, with videos showing users how to complete them. Performances are automatically scored by artificial intelligence (AI) technology. The data can then be accessed by clubs, allowing their scouts to peruse scores for viable talent, honing their search with a variety of filters; from age and gender to position on the pitch. The app currently has two English Premier League (EPL) partners, Chelsea and Burnley, and clubs can tailor their in-app trials to meet specific needs and set their own benchmarks by having their academy players complete the same drills. “We’re putting that data up front to make better use of [the scouts’] time,” said Richard Felton-Thomas, chief operating officer of ai.io, the company behind the app. “To say [to scouts], ‘Go over to this place today because there’s three players in that game that are all actually beating your Chelsea standard’ — that’s going to be the best use of your time.’” It already appears to be working for some. Ben Greenwood had never had a trial with a professional club until he downloaded the app in 2019. After uploading footage of himself, the 17-year-old landed a trial with Chelsea, becoming the first user of the app to get a trial with a pro club. He signed a contract with EPL team Bournemouth in 2021. Having beta-tested in with players spanning 125 countries, Greenwood among them, 135 players have been trialed or signed by pro clubs or national teams through the app — which fully launched in September 2023 — according to Felton-Thomas. Just over 100,000 players make up the current database, but with over 100 clubs lined up to join Chelsea and Burnley, as well as a multi-year partnership with Major League Soccer in the US announced last May, Felton-Thomas projects user numbers to surge into the millions as the operation ramps up this year. Felton-Thomas said the “lion’s share” of its income comes from charging clubs a license fee to run the platform. Annual fees vary depending on the size of the club and the tools they require, ranging from six figures for “tier one” sides like Chelsea, to thousands of pounds for clubs lower down the footballing pyramid. The use of smart technology in sport continues to expand, including AI commentary tools and wearable tech for elite athletes. The global market for sports analytics, valued at $2.7 billion in 2023, is projected to grow 22% by the end of the decade, according to market research firm Grand View Research. Should soccer talent scouts be concerned about being edged out by the arrival of AI in their industry? For Felton-Thomas, new technologies can co-exist with traditional methods. “It’s more about evolution than revolution,” Felton-Thomas explained. “We can’t tell you when that player’s actually in that match, how does he deal with adversity? What happens when he’s 2-0 down? What happens when someone’s shouting at him? What happens when he’s just made a massive mistake?” “We’ve got the ability to just augment real people to do their jobs better and faster, which then gives an opportunity to the player through the AI, but you’re still actually just connecting them to the human on the other side, which is the club and the scout.” While football remains ai.io’s primary focus, the company is looking into opportunities in other sports to launch in the coming years. Further ahead, it may branch out beyond sports. “You think about the notion that you can be at home and analyze your movements, and how this could spin into health care, physical assessments for military disciplines and emergency services,” Felton-Thomas told CNN.",CNN,01/03/2024,"['A London-based technology company is looking to “democratize” talent-identification and scouting in soccer using a mobile app.', 'Free to download and available globally, the aiScout app allows aspiring soccer stars to enter virtual trials for professional clubs by uploading self-recorded footage of themselves completing a series of drills.', 'It offers 75 exercises, designed to test a range of skills, with videos showing users how to complete them.', 'Performances are automatically scored by artificial intelligence (AI) technology.', 'The data can then be accessed by clubs, allowing their scouts to peruse scores for viable talent, honing their search with a variety of filters; from age and gender to position on the pitch.', 'The app currently has two English Premier League (EPL) partners, Chelsea and Burnley, and clubs can tailor their in-app trials to meet specific needs and set their own benchmarks by having their academy players complete the same drills.', '“We’re putting that data up front to make better use of [the scouts’] time,” said Richard Felton-Thomas, chief operating officer of ai.io, the company behind the app.', '“To say [to scouts], ‘Go over to this place today because there’s three players in that game that are all actually beating your Chelsea standard’ — that’s going to be the best use of your time.’”', 'It already appears to be working for some.', 'Ben Greenwood had never had a trial with a professional club until he downloaded the app in 2019.', 'After uploading footage of himself, the 17-year-old landed a trial with Chelsea, becoming the first user of the app to get a trial with a pro club.', 'He signed a contractwith EPL team Bournemouthin 2021.', 'Having beta-tested in with players spanning 125 countries, Greenwood among them, 135 players have been trialed or signed by pro clubs or national teams through the app — which fully launched in September 2023 — according to Felton-Thomas.', 'Just over 100,000 players make up the current database, but with over 100 clubs lined up to join Chelsea and Burnley, as well as a multi-year partnership with Major League Soccer in the US announced last May, Felton-Thomas projects user numbers to surge into the millions as the operation ramps up this year.', 'Felton-Thomas said the “lion’s share” of its income comes from charging clubs a license fee to run the platform.', 'Annual fees vary depending on the size of the club and the tools they require, ranging from six figures for “tier one” sides like Chelsea, to thousands of pounds for clubs lower down the footballing pyramid.', 'The use of smart technology in sport continues to expand, includingAI commentary tools and wearable tech for elite athletes.', 'The global market for sports analytics, valued at$2.7 billionin 2023, is projected to grow 22% by the end of the decade, according to market research firm Grand View Research.', 'Should soccer talent scouts be concerned about being edged out by the arrival of AI in their industry?', 'For Felton-Thomas, new technologies can co-exist with traditional methods.', '“It’s more about evolution than revolution,” Felton-Thomas explained.', '“We can’t tell you when that player’s actually in that match, how does he deal with adversity?', 'What happens when he’s 2-0 down?', 'What happens when someone’s shouting at him?', 'What happens when he’s just made a massive mistake?”', '“We’ve got the ability to just augment real people to do their jobs better and faster, which then gives an opportunity to the player through the AI, but you’re still actually just connecting them to the human on the other side, which is the club and the scout.”', 'While football remains ai.io’s primary focus, the company is looking into opportunities in other sports to launch in the coming years.', 'Further ahead, it may branch out beyond sports.', '“You think about the notion that you can be at home and analyze your movements, and how this could spin into health care, physical assessments for military disciplines and emergency services,” Felton-Thomas told CNN.']",0.2022322827681825,"The global market for sports analytics, valued at$2.7 billionin 2023, is projected to grow 22% by the end of the decade, according to market research firm Grand View Research.","“We can’t tell you when that player’s actually in that match, how does he deal with adversity?",0.6922526359558105,"The global market for sports analytics, valued at$2.7 billionin 2023, is projected to grow 22% by the end of the decade, according to market research firm Grand View Research.",Should soccer talent scouts be concerned about being edged out by the arrival of AI in their industry?,2024-05-19 Opinion: The drama around Sam Altman is an urgent warning,https://edition.cnn.com/2023/11/21/opinions/sam-altman-openai-ouster-danger-filipovic/index.html," Published 9:50 AM EST, Tue November 21, 2023 ","The biggest tech news this week is the ouster of Sam Altman from his role as CEO of OpenAI, a move that has shaken the company and the industry. Hundreds of OpenAI employees have threatened to resign. Altman has already moved on to a role at Microsoft. And OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is on its third CEO in as many days. It’s all very juicy. But this drama should also be raising larger questions, far beyond one company’s internal hirings and firings, including: Who are the people making the decisions that will determine so much of our technological future? What guiding principles are they using to make those decisions? And how should other institutions – governments, non-tech industries, global alliances, regulatory bodies – reign in the worst excesses of potentially dangerous AI innovators? OpenAI was founded as a nonprofit, with an explicit mission to harness what may soon be superhuman intelligence “to benefit humanity as a whole.” But that sensibility hasn’t lasted. The company now has a multi-billion-dollar for-profit arm. They have been developing new technologies at lightning speed, and sometimes sending them out to the public before some employees believed they were ready. The company has already reportedly invented an AI technology so dangerous they will never release it – but they also won’t tell reporters or the public exactly what it is. This dynamic – a potentially dangerous technology developed at extreme speed, largely behind closed doors – is partly to blame for Altman’s firing. The OpenAI board, according to CNN’s David Goldman, worried that “the company was making the technological equivalent of a nuclear bomb, and its caretaker, Sam Altman, was moving so fast that he risked a global catastrophe.” At particular issue seemed to be Altman’s efforts to make the tools behind ChatGPT available to anyone who wanted to make their own version of the chatbot. This could be widely disastrous, some board members worried. But then they fired him without warning, and apparently without involving Microsoft, the company’s largest shareholder. Now, Altman is at the new AI group at Microsoft, and one has to wonder if the oversight and caution there will be on par with that at OpenAI, or if he’ll be handed carte blanche to push as fast and hard as he wants. And for all the justified reticence of the OpenAI board, the company has carried out much of its work in secrecy – without the public really understanding what a handful of unaccountable technologists are building, and how it is nearly guaranteed to indelibly change their lives. AI is broadly understood to have the potential to reshape vast swaths of human existence. At the very least, it seems nearly guaranteed to change how we process information, how we communicate, how we learn and how we work (and if we work). And the ramifications could be much more extreme. AI technologies have already demonstrated the ability to lie and to cover their tracks. They have already been able to suggest the design to make a virus spread more quickly. Many researchers acutely understand just how quickly these machines could develop the capacity to annihilate us, including Altman: He has a prepper’s paradise prepared in Big Sur, complete with guns and “gas masks from the Israeli Defense Force” in case AI goes off the rails and the robots go to war against humans, according to reporting in the New Yorker. But don’t worry, he told an Atlantic reporter: If AI is determined to wipe us out, “no gas mask is helping anyone.” (If you want an excellent and terrifying rundown of AI’s risks – at least those we understand right now, which are almost certainly a mere sliver of the looming perils – the Atlantic profile of Altman and his technology is worth a read). AI is very exciting technology. But it is also a potentially very dangerous one, and not in the social media sense of “it may give us bad self-esteem and make us lonelier” but in the sense of “it could break down human societies and kill us all.” Given the life-altering potential of AI – that even if it doesn’t kill us all, it will almost certainly change human existence in unprecedented ways at unprecedented speed – we all have a stake in how it’s being developed. And yet the development is being left to a handful of people (who seem to be largely men) in Silicon Valley, and other tech pockets around the globe. And we all have a stake in whose interests AI will serve – and right now, its development is being funded with billions of dollars by people expecting to make a huge profit. Do the interests of the public align with the interests of the shareholders to whom profit-driven, potentially tremendously lucrative-for-a-few companies are beholden? Or with the interests of tech entrepreneurs who are primarily excited about being at the forefront of the AI revolution, regardless of the potential human costs? One thing is clear: AI is coming. And how it is built and unleashed on the public matters more than perhaps any technology of the past century. It is, indeed, up there with the atom bomb in its destructive potential – except likely more difficult to regulate and control. “Regulation” does not begin to scratch the surface of what’s needed to make sure that the AI future is not a catastrophic one, especially since the development of AI is now a massive international arms race, with particularly horrific implications if bad actors develop this technology first. But regulation is, at minimum, a necessary step. So is transparency: In the US, companies have wide leverage to work behind a veil of secrecy, and much of what AI companies do is kept secret to stymy competition. But the public certainly has a right to understand what life-altering technologies are set to be inflicted upon us, and what the creators are doing to protect humanity – our jobs, our communities, our families, our connections, our educations and our abilities to build a life of purpose, but also our lives and our safety. The Altman story is fascinating because Altman is the most powerful figure in AI technology, which in effect makes him one of the most powerful men in the world. But that should give us pause: Who is he, what power does he hold, what is he doing with it, who does he answer to, and are we comfortable with this much life-altering potential being held by a few unaccountable people?",CNN,21/11/2023,"['The biggest tech news this week is theousterof Sam Altman from his role as CEO of OpenAI, a move that has shaken the company and the industry.', 'Hundreds of OpenAI employees have threatened toresign.', 'Altman has alreadymoved onto a role at Microsoft.', 'And OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is on itsthird CEOin as many days.', 'It’s all very juicy.', 'But this drama should also be raising larger questions, far beyond one company’s internal hirings and firings, including: Who are the people making the decisionsthat will determine so much of our technological future?', 'What guiding principles are they using to make those decisions?', 'And how should other institutions – governments, non-tech industries, global alliances, regulatory bodies – reign in the worst excesses of potentially dangerous AI innovators?', 'OpenAI was founded as a nonprofit, with an explicit mission to harness what may soon be superhuman intelligence “to benefit humanity as a whole.”', 'But that sensibility hasn’t lasted.', 'The company now has a multi-billion-dollar for-profit arm.', 'They have been developing new technologies at lightning speed, and sometimes sending them out to the publicbefore some employees believed they were ready.', 'The company has already reportedly invented an AI technology so dangerous they will never release it – but they alsowon’t tellreporters or the public exactly what it is.', 'This dynamic – a potentially dangerous technology developed at extreme speed, largely behind closed doors – is partly to blame for Altman’s firing.', 'The OpenAI board, according toCNN’s David Goldman, worried that “the company was making the technological equivalent of a nuclear bomb, and its caretaker, Sam Altman, was moving so fast that he risked a global catastrophe.”', 'At particular issue seemed to be Altman’s efforts to make the tools behind ChatGPT available to anyone who wanted to make their own version of the chatbot.', 'This could be widely disastrous, some board members worried.', 'But then they fired him without warning, and apparently without involving Microsoft, the company’s largest shareholder.', 'Now, Altman is at the new AI group at Microsoft, and one has to wonder if the oversight and caution there will be on par with that at OpenAI, or if he’ll be handed carte blanche to push as fast and hard as he wants.', 'And for all the justified reticence of the OpenAI board, the company has carried out much of its work in secrecy – without the public really understanding what a handful of unaccountable technologists are building, and how it is nearly guaranteed to indelibly change their lives.', 'AI is broadly understood to have the potential to reshape vast swaths of human existence.', 'At the very least, it seems nearly guaranteed to change how we process information, how we communicate, how we learn and how we work (and if we work).', 'And the ramifications could be much more extreme.', 'AI technologies have already demonstrated the abilityto lie and to cover their tracks.', 'They have already been able tosuggest the designto make a virus spread more quickly.', 'Many researchersacutely understandjust how quickly these machines could develop the capacity to annihilate us, including Altman: He has a prepper’s paradise prepared in Big Sur, complete with guns and “gas masks from the Israeli Defense Force” in case AI goes off the rails and the robots go to war against humans,according to reporting in the New Yorker.', 'But don’t worry, he told an Atlantic reporter: If AI is determined to wipe us out, “no gas mask is helping anyone.” (', 'If you want an excellent and terrifying rundown of AI’s risks – at least those we understand right now, which are almost certainly a mere sliver of the looming perils –the Atlantic profile of Altman and his technologyis worth a read).', 'AI is very exciting technology.', 'But it is also a potentially very dangerous one, and not in the social media sense of “it may give us bad self-esteem and make us lonelier” but in the sense of “it could break down human societies and kill us all.”', 'Given the life-altering potential of AI – that even if it doesn’t kill us all, it will almost certainly change human existence in unprecedented ways at unprecedented speed – we all have a stake in how it’s being developed.', 'And yet the development is being left to a handful of people (who seem to belargelymen) in Silicon Valley, and other tech pockets around the globe.', 'And we all have a stake in whose interests AI will serve – and right now, its development is being funded with billions of dollars by people expecting to make a huge profit.', 'Do the interests of the public align with the interests of the shareholders to whom profit-driven, potentially tremendously lucrative-for-a-few companies are beholden?', 'Or with the interests of tech entrepreneurs who are primarily excited about being at the forefront of the AI revolution, regardless of the potential human costs?', 'One thing is clear: AI is coming.', 'And how it is built and unleashed on the public matters more than perhaps any technology of the past century.', 'It is, indeed, up there with the atom bomb in its destructive potential – except likely more difficult to regulate and control.', '“Regulation” does not begin to scratch the surface of what’s needed to make sure that the AI future is not a catastrophic one, especially since the development of AI is now a massive international arms race, with particularly horrific implications if bad actors develop this technology first.', 'But regulation is, at minimum, a necessary step.', 'So is transparency: In the US, companies have wide leverage to work behind a veil of secrecy, and much of what AI companies do is kept secret to stymy competition.', 'But the public certainly has a right to understand what life-altering technologies are set to be inflicted upon us, and what the creators are doing to protect humanity – our jobs, our communities, our families, our connections, our educations and our abilities to build a life of purpose, but also our lives and our safety.', 'The Altman story is fascinating because Altman is the most powerful figure in AI technology, which in effect makes him one of the most powerful men in the world.', 'But that should give us pause: Who is he, what power does he hold, what is he doing with it, who does he answer to, and are we comfortable with this much life-altering potential being held by a few unaccountable people?']",0.0034737194649936,"But the public certainly has a right to understand what life-altering technologies are set to be inflicted upon us, and what the creators are doing to protect humanity – our jobs, our communities, our families, our connections, our educations and our abilities to build a life of purpose, but also our lives and our safety.","But it is also a potentially very dangerous one, and not in the social media sense of “it may give us bad self-esteem and make us lonelier” but in the sense of “it could break down human societies and kill us all.”",-0.2999433577060699,AI technologies have already demonstrated the abilityto lie and to cover their tracks.,"But it is also a potentially very dangerous one, and not in the social media sense of “it may give us bad self-esteem and make us lonelier” but in the sense of “it could break down human societies and kill us all.”",2024-05-19 "NBC hires former RNC chair Ronna McDaniel, who has demonized the press and refused to acknowledge Biden was fairly elected",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/22/media/ronna-mcdaniel-nbc/index.html," Published 1:53 PM EDT, Fri March 22, 2024 ","NBC News on Friday announced that it had hired Ronna McDaniel, the former Republican National Committee chair who has repeatedly attacked the network and its journalists, assailed the news media as “fake news” and promoted false claims around the 2020 vote, as an on-air commentator ahead of the 2024 presidential election. “It couldn’t be a more important moment to have a voice like Ronna’s on the team,” Carrie Budoff Brown, senior vice president of politics at NBC News, said in a memo to staff. McDaniel exited the RNC earlier this month after leading the organization since 2016. During her time as chair, McDaniel repeatedly attacked the press, which has become increasingly popular in Republican circles over the last several years as Donald Trump demonizes journalists and news institutions. McDaniel echoed many such attacks, labeling the press as “fake news” and calling the media “corrupt.” At times, she even targeted NBC News and MSNBC with dishonest attacks. In 2019, for instance, McDaniel accused Richard Engel, NBC News’ chief foreign correspondent, of “actively cheering for an economic downturn.” “How can NBC let him keep his job when he’s made his bias so clear?” McDaniel asked. McDaniel has a lengthier history attacking the progressive cable news channel MSNBC, which she will appear on in her new role. In recent years, she has repeatedly attacked the channel for “spreading lies” and blasted those she described as the network’s “primetime propagandists.” An NBC spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment about her attacks on the news media and NBC. In her role as RNC chief, McDaniel also fanned the flames of election denialism after the 2020 presidential contest. McDaniel was involved in a phone call in 2020 to pressure Michigan county officials not to certify the vote from the Detroit area, where Joe Biden had a commanding lead. McDaniel told the officials, regarding the certification: “Do not sign it. … We will get you attorneys.” The Michigan Department of State’s office condemned her claims of supposed voter fraud in the wake of the election, stating they had “no merit.” The state’s “elections were conducted fairly, effectively and transparently and are an accurate reflection of the will of Michigan voters,” it said in a detailed fact check posted online. In an interview with CNN’s Chris Wallace last year, McDaniel defended her claims of voting “irregularity” in the election. “I think saying that there were problems with 2020 is very real. I don’t think that’s election denying,” McDaniel told Wallace. “I’m from Wayne County. We had a woman send a note saying I’m being told to backdate ballots. We had to look into that. That’s deeply concerning. When you have friends who are poll-watching and being kicked out, that’s deeply concerning. We have every right to look at that.” In the interview, Wallace pressed McDaniel if she believed Biden legitimately won the election. “I think there were lots of problems with 2020. Ultimately, he won the election but there were lots of problems with the 2020 election,” she said. “But I don’t think he won it fair. I don’t. I’m not going to say that.” NBC’s hiring of McDaniel, however, plays into a recent trend at the network’s outlets, which has seemingly softened its stance on Trump as he inches toward the Republican nomination for president. Earlier this month, CNBC hosted Trump for a lengthy phone interview in which the network’s anchors allowed him to peddle lies and conspiracy theories on air without scrutiny. MSNBC has even started carrying Trump’s remarks live on television, a practice that the network boasted for years it would not do. Star host Rachel Maddow, who has said carrying Trump’s lies on the air is dangerous, even objected to the network broadcasting a recent speech from the presumptive Republican nominee, calling it “irresponsible.”",CNN,22/03/2024,"['NBC News on Friday announced that it had hired Ronna McDaniel, the former Republican National Committee chair who has repeatedlyattacked the network and its journalists,assailed thenewsmedia as “fake news” and promoted false claims around the 2020vote,as an on-air commentatorahead of the 2024 presidential election.', '“It couldn’t be a more important moment to have a voice like Ronna’s on the team,” Carrie Budoff Brown, senior vice president of politics at NBC News, said in a memoto staff.', 'McDaniel exited the RNC earlier this month after leading the organization since 2016.', 'During her time as chair, McDaniel repeatedly attacked the press, which has become increasingly popular in Republican circles over the last several years as Donald Trump demonizes journalists and news institutions.', 'McDaniel echoed many such attacks, labeling the press as “fake news” and calling the media “corrupt.”', 'At times, she even targeted NBC Newsand MSNBCwith dishonest attacks.', 'In 2019, for instance, McDaniel accused Richard Engel, NBC News’ chief foreign correspondent, of “actively cheering for an economic downturn.”', '“How can NBC let him keep his job when he’s made his bias so clear?”', 'McDaniel asked.', 'McDaniel has a lengthier history attacking the progressive cable news channel MSNBC, which she will appear on in her new role.', 'In recent years, she has repeatedly attacked the channel for “spreading lies” and blasted those she described as the network’s “primetime propagandists.”', 'An NBC spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment about her attacks on the news media and NBC.', 'In her role as RNC chief, McDaniel also fanned the flames of election denialism after the 2020 presidential contest.', 'McDaniel was involved in a phone call in 2020 to pressure Michigan county officials not to certify the vote from the Detroit area, where Joe Biden had a commanding lead.', 'McDanieltold the officials, regarding the certification: “Do not sign it. …', 'We will get you attorneys.”', 'The Michigan Department of State’s office condemned her claims of supposed voter fraud in the wake of the election, stating they had “no merit.', '”The state’s “elections were conducted fairly, effectively and transparently and are an accurate reflection of the will of Michigan voters,” it said in adetailed fact checkposted online.', 'In an interview with CNN’s Chris Wallace last year, McDaniel defended her claims of voting “irregularity” in the election.', '“I think saying that there were problems with 2020 is very real.', 'I don’t think that’s election denying,” McDaniel told Wallace. “', 'I’m from Wayne County.', 'We had a woman send a note saying I’m being told to backdate ballots.', 'We had to look into that.', 'That’s deeply concerning.', 'When you have friends who are poll-watching and being kicked out, that’s deeply concerning.', 'We have every right to look at that.”', 'In the interview,Wallace pressed McDaniel if she believed Biden legitimately won the election.', '“I think there were lots of problems with 2020.', 'Ultimately, he won the electionbut there were lots of problems with the 2020 election,” she said. “', 'But I don’t think he won it fair.', 'I don’t.', 'I’m not going to say that.”', 'NBC’s hiring of McDaniel, however, plays into a recent trend at thenetwork’s outlets, which has seemingly softened its stance on Trump as he inches toward the Republican nomination for president.', 'Earlier this month, CNBC hosted Trump for a lengthy phone interview in which the network’s anchors allowed him to peddle lies and conspiracy theories on airwithout scrutiny.', 'MSNBC has even started carrying Trump’s remarks live on television, a practice that the network boasted for years it would not do.', 'Star host Rachel Maddow, who has said carrying Trump’s lieson the airis dangerous, even objected to the network broadcasting a recent speech from the presumptive Republican nominee, calling it “irresponsible.”']",-0.069193576701305,But I don’t think he won it fair.,"At times, she even targeted NBC Newsand MSNBCwith dishonest attacks.",-0.2803101042906443,"NBC’s hiring of McDaniel, however, plays into a recent trend at thenetwork’s outlets, which has seemingly softened its stance on Trump as he inches toward the Republican nomination for president.",“I think there were lots of problems with 2020.,2024-05-19 How to make high interest rates work for your hard-earned savings,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/20/success/interest-rates-savings-cash/index.html," Published 3:00 PM EDT, Wed March 20, 2024 ","The Federal Reserve’s benchmark interest rate remains at a 23-year high. That’s thanks to the central bank’s decision Wednesday to once again hold it steady, as it has done at the policy-making committee’s past five meetings. That decision may be disappointing to some investors, homebuyers and those with a lot of credit card debt, since movement in the Fed’s overnight lending rate influences rates — directly or indirectly — on consumer financial products (e.g., credit cards, bank loans and mortgages). But with the Fed signaling that no rate cuts are likely until summer, it also means anyone with savings still has at least a few more months to make hay of their stash. That’s because you can still get inflation-beating interest rates that will grow any money you have set aside for emergencies, vacations, down payments or any other goal in your sights over the next several years. However, that won’t happen if you just let it sit in a traditional checking or savings account that yields next to nothing. There are more lucrative, low-risk options out there, with rates that are still at or near their peaks. “But perhaps not for much longer,” said Ted Rossman, senior analyst at Bankrate. “If one of those fits into your financial plans, it’s best to act soon.” So, consider the following options when deciding where to park your hard-earned savings. The average annual percentage yield on bank savings accounts was just 0.52% as of March 13, according to Bankrate. That average is kept low by the biggest brick-and-mortar banks like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, which still are offering a paltry 0.01%. By contrast, there are still FDIC-insured online banks offering inflation-beating rates of between 4.35% and 5.35% on their high-yield savings accounts. Generally speaking, these are the best vehicles in which to keep your emergency funds for quick, easy access. Choosing between an account that pays 0.52% and one that pays 5.35% can mean forfeiting hundreds of dollars in interest. “If you put $10,000 in a savings account, that’s a difference of $496 in interest earnings over the course of the year, assuming monthly compounding,” Rossman said. While the rates on high-yield savings accounts have gone down a bit in recent months, “widespread cuts in online savings account rates are unlikely until the first Fed rate cut is near,” said Ken Tumin, founder of DepositAccounts.com. As with any bank savings rate, high-yield savings account rates can change overnight, and the bank may not alert you when it lowers it. So make sure to check your monthly statement. Another high-return, low-risk investment that is great for money you likely won’t need to tap for a few months or even a couple of years is a certificate of deposit. You can get the best returns on CDs through a brokerage such as Schwab, E*Trade or Fidelity. That’s because you can comparison shop for CDs from any number of FDIC-insured banks and will not have to set up individual accounts with each institution. As of March 13, the average rate on a one-year CD was 1.95%, but some banks are offering as much are 5.4%. If you can get a one-year CD at, say, 5.4%, you will make $540 on a $10,000 investment. To get the greatest benefit from a CD, you have to leave the money invested for a fixed period. You can always access your principal sooner if you need to, but there may be early withdrawal penalties. As of March 20, CDs listed on Schwab.com with durations from three months up to three years were all yielding between 5.2% and 5.51%. CD rates on durations between four and 10 years ranged from 4.40% to 5.15%. Say you invest $10,000 in a one-year CD with a 5.36% APY. At the end of that period, you’d get your principal back plus $536 in interest when the CD matures, according to Bankrate’s CD calculator. If you chose a two-year CD at 5.25%, you’d bank an extra $1,078, assuming compounding interest. The same investment in a five-year CD at 5.15% would earn $2,854. “It makes sense to go long with CDs. To hedge your bets, include terms from one to five years. Starting a CD ladder will provide this mix,” Tumin said. If you don’t go through a brokerage you may get a reasonable deal from your primary bank, Tumin said. For example, he noted, Wells Fargo is still offering up to 5.01% on both 4-month and 7-month CDs. Or, at Bank of America, you can get up to 4.75% on a 7-month CD. But Tumin cautions that with any big bank CD you should take your money out at the end of the term, otherwise your bank may automatically renew it and lock you in to a much lower-yielding CD. If you don’t want to set up an online savings account at another bank, your own bank may offer you a money market deposit account that pays a higher yield than your regular checking or savings accounts. Money market accounts may have higher minimum deposit requirements than a regular savings account, but they are more liquid than a fixed-term certificate of deposit or Treasury bill, meaning they give you access to your money more quickly while still potentially giving you some of the highest yields available, said Doug Ornstein, senior manager for integrated solutions at TIAA Wealth Management. But don’t confuse money market accounts with money market mutual funds, which invest in short-term, low-risk debt instruments. As of March 19, they had an average 7-day yield of 5.14%, according to the Crane Money Fund Index, which tracks the top 100 taxable money market funds. Unlike money market deposit accounts, money market mutual funds are not insured by the FDIC. But if you invest in a money market fund through a brokerage, your overall account is likely to be insured through the Securities Investor Protection Corp, which offers protection in the event your brokerage ever goes under. Another option for money you can leave untouched anywhere from several months to a few years is to buy short-term Treasury bills and medium-term notes, which are backed by the full faith and credit of the United States. Three- and six-month bills had yields of 5.39% and 5.33% respectively on March 20 before the Fed’s meeting ended, while nine-month and one-year bills were offering 5.19% and 5.08% respectively, according to rates posted on Schwab.com for a $25,000 investment. Rates on Treasury notes with durations from two years to 10 years ranged between 4.29% and 4.72%. If you’re someone who manages your portfolio like a hawk, you may feel comfortable buying T-bills on your own from TreasuryDirect.gov. But if you don’t, it might be easier just to buy new issues through your brokerage account or invest in a short-term bond index fund or ETF, said Andy Smith, executive director of financial planning at Edelman Financial Engines. And if you’re looking at money that will be needed in three to five years, you might consider a diversified fund of highly rated government and corporate bonds, Ornstein said. An 18-month AAA-rated corporate bond, for instance, was yielding 4.82% this week, while the three-year was at 4.49%. Meanwhile, three-year AAA-rated municipal bonds (which are issued by local governments) had a rate of 3.98%, according to Schwab.com. When deciding on the best accounts and investments for your specific goals and peace of mind, it may pay to consult a fee-only fiduciary adviser — meaning, someone who doesn’t get paid a commission to sell you a particular investment. What you’ll always want to do is build in flexibility for yourself so you can easily access cash, regardless of your timeline for key goals. “What happens if something changes and you need that down payment a lot sooner — or your parents need medical care fast?” Smith said. That means balancing your desire for great yield with a need and desire for ease of access without penalty. Translation: Don’t chase yield for yield’s sake. Think of it this way, Ornstein said: Unless you have huge sums to invest or are an institutional investor, the difference between getting a 5.1% yield versus 5% is negligible, and in fact it could even cost you more if there are penalties for taking your money out early. “Most of the time convenience is really important. Give up the 0.1%,” he advised.",CNN,20/03/2024,"['The Federal Reserve’s benchmark interest rate remains at a 23-year high.', 'That’s thanks to the central bank’s decision Wednesday to once again hold it steady, as it has done at the policy-making committee’s past five meetings.', 'That decision may be disappointing to some investors, homebuyers and those with a lot of credit card debt, since movement in the Fed’s overnight lending rate influences rates — directly or indirectly — on consumer financial products (e.g., credit cards, bank loans and mortgages).', 'Butwith the Fed signaling that no rate cuts are likely until summer, it also means anyone with savings still has at least a few more months to make hay of their stash.', 'That’s because you can still get inflation-beating interest rates that will grow any money you have set aside for emergencies, vacations, down payments or any other goal in your sights over the next several years.', 'However, that won’t happen if you just let it sit in a traditional checking or savings account that yields next to nothing.', 'There are more lucrative, low-risk options out there, with rates that are still at or near their peaks. “', 'But perhaps not for much longer,” said Ted Rossman, senior analyst at Bankrate. “', 'If one of those fits into your financial plans, it’s best to act soon.”', 'So, consider the following options when deciding where to park your hard-earned savings.', 'The average annual percentage yield on bank savings accounts was just 0.52% as of March 13, according to Bankrate.', 'That average is kept low by the biggest brick-and-mortar banks like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, which still are offering a paltry 0.01%.', 'By contrast, there are still FDIC-insured online banks offering inflation-beating rates of between 4.35% and 5.35% on their high-yield savings accounts.', 'Generally speaking, these are the best vehicles in which to keep your emergency funds for quick, easy access.', 'Choosing between an account that pays 0.52% and one that pays 5.35% can mean forfeiting hundreds of dollars in interest. “', 'If you put $10,000 in a savings account, that’s a difference of $496 in interest earnings over the course of the year, assuming monthly compounding,” Rossman said.', 'While the rates on high-yield savings accounts have gone down a bit in recent months, “widespread cuts in online savings account rates are unlikely until the first Fed rate cut is near,” said Ken Tumin, founder of DepositAccounts.com.', 'As with any bank savings rate, high-yield savings accountratescan change overnight, and the bank may not alert you when it lowers it.', 'So make sure to check your monthly statement.', 'Another high-return, low-risk investment that is great for money you likely won’t need to tap for a few months or even a couple of years is a certificate of deposit.', 'You can get the best returns on CDs through a brokerage such as Schwab, E*Trade or Fidelity.', 'That’s because you can comparison shop for CDs from any number of FDIC-insured banks and will not have to set up individual accounts with each institution.', 'As of March 13, the average rate on a one-year CD was 1.95%, but some banks are offering as much are 5.4%.', 'If you can get a one-year CD at, say, 5.4%, you will make $540 on a $10,000 investment.', 'To get the greatest benefit from a CD, you have to leave the money invested for a fixed period.', 'You can always access your principal sooner if you need to, but there may be early withdrawal penalties.', 'As of March 20, CDs listed on Schwab.com with durations from three months up to three years were all yielding between 5.2% and 5.51%.', 'CD rates on durations between four and 10 years ranged from 4.40% to 5.15%.', 'Say you invest $10,000 in a one-year CD with a 5.36%APY.', 'At the end of that period, you’d get your principal back plus $536 in interest when the CD matures, according to Bankrate’s CD calculator.', 'If you chose a two-year CD at 5.25%, you’d bank an extra $1,078, assuming compounding interest.', 'The same investment in a five-year CD at 5.15% would earn $2,854.', '“It makes sense to go long with CDs.', 'To hedge your bets, include terms from one to five years.', 'Starting a CD ladder will provide this mix,” Tumin said.', 'If you don’t go through a brokerage you may get a reasonable deal from your primary bank, Tumin said.', 'For example, he noted, Wells Fargo is still offering up to 5.01% on both 4-month and 7-month CDs.', 'Or, at Bank of America, you can get up to 4.75% on a 7-month CD.', 'But Tumin cautions that with any big bank CD you should take your money out at the end of the term, otherwise your bank may automatically renew it and lock you in to a much lower-yielding CD.', 'If you don’t want to set up an online savings account at another bank, your own bank may offer you a money market deposit account that pays a higher yield than your regular checking or savings accounts.', 'Money market accounts may have higher minimum deposit requirements than a regular savings account, but they are more liquid than a fixed-term certificate of deposit or Treasury bill, meaning they give you access to your money more quickly while still potentially giving you some of the highest yields available, said Doug Ornstein, senior manager for integrated solutions at TIAA Wealth Management.', 'But don’t confuse money market accounts with money market mutual funds, which invest in short-term, low-risk debt instruments.', 'As of March 19, they had an average 7-day yield of 5.14%, according to the Crane Money Fund Index, which tracks the top 100 taxable money market funds.', 'Unlike money market deposit accounts, money market mutual funds are not insured by the FDIC.', 'But if you invest in a money market fund through a brokerage, your overall account is likely to be insured through the Securities Investor Protection Corp, which offers protection in the event your brokerage ever goes under.', 'Another option for money you can leave untouched anywhere from several months to a few years is to buy short-term Treasury bills and medium-term notes, which are backed by the full faith and credit of the United States.', 'Three- and six-month bills had yields of 5.39% and 5.33%respectively on March 20 before the Fed’s meeting ended, while nine-month and one-year bills were offering 5.19% and 5.08%respectively, according to rates posted on Schwab.com for a $25,000 investment.', 'Rates on Treasury notes with durations from two years to 10 years ranged between 4.29% and 4.72%.', 'If you’re someone who manages your portfolio like a hawk, you may feel comfortable buying T-bills on your own from TreasuryDirect.gov.', 'But if you don’t, it might be easier just to buy new issues through your brokerage account or invest in a short-term bond index fund or ETF, said Andy Smith, executive director of financial planning at Edelman Financial Engines.', 'And if you’re looking at money that will be needed in three to five years, you might consider a diversified fund of highly rated government and corporate bonds, Ornstein said.', 'An 18-month AAA-rated corporate bond, for instance, was yielding 4.82% this week, while the three-year was at 4.49%.', 'Meanwhile, three-year AAA-rated municipal bonds (which are issued by local governments) had a rate of 3.98%, according to Schwab.com.', 'When deciding on the best accounts and investments for your specific goals and peace of mind, it may pay to consult a fee-only fiduciary adviser — meaning, someone who doesn’t get paid a commission to sell you a particular investment.', 'What you’ll always want to do is build in flexibility for yourself so you can easily access cash, regardless of your timeline for key goals. “', 'What happens if something changes and you need that down payment a lot sooner — or your parents need medical care fast?”', 'Smith said.', 'That means balancing your desire for great yield with a need and desire for ease of access without penalty.', 'Translation: Don’t chase yield for yield’s sake.', 'Think of it this way, Ornstein said: Unless you have huge sums to invest or are an institutional investor, the difference between getting a 5.1% yield versus 5% is negligible, and in fact it could even cost you more if there are penalties for taking your money out early. “', 'Most of the time convenience is really important.', 'Give up the 0.1%,” he advised.']",0.1607169988950149,That means balancing your desire for great yield with a need and desire for ease of access without penalty.,"But don’t confuse money market accounts with money market mutual funds, which invest in short-term, low-risk debt instruments.",0.3840319812297821,"For example, he noted, Wells Fargo is still offering up to 5.01% on both 4-month and 7-month CDs.","That decision may be disappointing to some investors, homebuyers and those with a lot of credit card debt, since movement in the Fed’s overnight lending rate influences rates — directly or indirectly — on consumer financial products (e.g., credit cards, bank loans and mortgages).",2024-05-19 Digital humans: the relatable face of artificial intelligence?,https://edition.cnn.com/business/digital-humans-ai-dj-dex-spc/index.html," Published 5:33 AM EDT, Tue March 19, 2024 ","Scrolling through the Instagram account of DJ and aspiring model Dex you’ll see her wearing new outfits, performing at shows around the world and chatting to her thousands of followers about her hobbies. However, it’s clear that there is something different about Dex; she’s an entirely virtual “digital human,” designed by a startup in the UK. For her performances, Dex is displayed on a video screen or as a holographic projection, with her mixes created by humans. She is animated using Unreal Engine — a 3D modeling software widely used in video games — combined with motion-capture. Generative artificial intelligence allows her to remember information and respond to questions, using a voice also generated by AI. “She’s probably one of the only digital humans in the performance space that you can have a conversation and interact with,” says Denise Harris, CCO of startup Sum Vivas. “You can ask her anything. She is a genius about music.” Last month, Dex performed at Digital Fashion Weeks in New York, Paris and Milan, and she has modeled outfits by Prada and Louis Vuitton at digital fashion events. For Liverpool-based Sum Vivas she’s a “showpiece” for more practical applications. The company is now developing digital humans that can “listen” to people’s questions and converse in real time. “Shellie” can provide product information as an avatar on company websites, while “Arif” is set to direct passengers and answer questions as a multilingual concierge on screens at airports. According to CEO and founder Rob Sims, digital humans can help bridge the gap between AI technology and people. “What we’ve found is when people start working with and conversing with a digital human, they very quickly suspend disbelief,” Sims tells CNN. “It becomes natural.” Since OpenAI’s ChatGPT was launched in November 2022, considerable hype has surrounded the potential of generative AI — artificial intelligence powered by huge datasets of information, capable of generating text outputs in a conversational way. Record levels of investment into generative AI have followed, with over $21 billion poured into the industry during the first nine months of last year, according to data insights company Pitchbook. In March 2023, Google launched Bard (recently renamed Gemini) and around the same time Anthropic released its AI assistant Claude. As generative AI chatbots become increasingly ubiquitous, Sum Vivas is one of several companies looking to make them more human. US and New Zealand-based UneeQ has developed animated conversational “digital humans” that can be used as virtual sales reps and customer service agents on company websites, and this month it debuted Sama 2.0, an animated cabin crew member that answers questions on Qatar Airways’ website and app. Microsoft recently announced that users of its Azure software would be able to create lifelike avatars capable of turning text prompts into animated speech. However, there are widespread concerns about the impact AI could have on the job market. “When we rely on automated tools, what skills are we losing in the process?” asks Jennifer Ding, senior researcher at the Alan Turing Institute, the UK’s national institute for data science and artificial intelligence. “In some ways, we think of AI as something that’s helping us or augmenting our work,” she says. “However, alongside, this fear of replacement is bubbling up more and more.” Harris, however, points to new opportunities within digital human design and development. “Every scenario that we found, we’re creating jobs and working in harmony with people rather than taking away jobs,” she says. “Digital humans, first and foremost, should work with other human colleagues,” adds Sims. “We’ll move into a stage where digital humans will start to become just another member of the team, with added benefits for that team, and obviously the customers they serve.”",CNN,19/03/2024,"['Scrolling through the Instagram account of DJ and aspiring model Dex you’ll see her wearing new outfits, performing at shows around the world and chatting to her thousands of followers about her hobbies.', 'However, it’s clear that there is something different about Dex; she’s an entirely virtual “digital human,” designed by a startup in the UK.', 'For her performances, Dex is displayed on a video screen or as a holographic projection, with her mixes created by humans.', 'She is animated using Unreal Engine — a 3D modeling software widely used in video games — combined with motion-capture.', 'Generative artificial intelligence allows her to remember information and respond to questions, using a voice also generated by AI.', '“She’s probably one of the only digital humans in the performance space that you can have a conversation and interact with,” says Denise Harris, CCO of startup Sum Vivas. “', 'You can ask her anything.', 'She is a genius about music.”', 'Last month, Dex performed at Digital Fashion Weeks in New York, Paris and Milan, and she has modeled outfits by Prada and Louis Vuitton at digital fashion events.', 'For Liverpool-based Sum Vivas she’s a “showpiece” for more practical applications.', 'The company is now developing digital humans that can “listen” to people’s questions and converse in real time. “', 'Shellie” can provide product information as an avatar on company websites, while “Arif” is set to direct passengers and answer questions as a multilingual concierge on screens at airports.', 'According to CEO and founder Rob Sims, digital humans can help bridge the gap between AI technology and people. “', 'What we’ve found is when people start working with and conversing with a digital human, they very quickly suspend disbelief,” Sims tells CNN. “', 'It becomes natural.”', 'Since OpenAI’s ChatGPT was launched in November 2022, considerable hype has surrounded the potential of generative AI — artificial intelligence powered by huge datasets of information, capable of generating text outputs in a conversational way.', 'Record levels of investment into generative AI have followed, with over $21 billion poured into the industry during the first nine months of last year, according to data insights company Pitchbook.', 'In March 2023, Google launched Bard (recently renamed Gemini) and around the same time Anthropic released its AI assistant Claude.', 'As generative AI chatbots become increasingly ubiquitous, Sum Vivas is one of several companies looking to make them more human.', 'US and New Zealand-based UneeQ has developed animated conversational “digital humans” that can be used as virtual sales reps and customer service agents on company websites, and this month it debuted Sama 2.0, an animated cabin crew member that answers questions on Qatar Airways’ website and app.', 'Microsoft recently announced that users of its Azure software would be able to create lifelike avatars capable of turning text prompts into animated speech.', 'However, there are widespread concerns about the impact AI could have on the job market.', '“When we rely on automated tools, what skills are we losing in the process?”', 'asks Jennifer Ding, senior researcher at the Alan Turing Institute, the UK’s national institute for data science and artificial intelligence. “', 'In some ways, we think of AI as something that’s helping us or augmenting our work,” she says. “', 'However, alongside, this fear of replacement is bubbling up more and more.”', 'Harris, however, points to new opportunities within digital human design and development. “', 'Every scenario that we found, we’re creating jobs and working in harmony with people rather than taking away jobs,” she says.', '“Digital humans, first and foremost, should work with other human colleagues,” adds Sims. “', 'We’ll move into a stage where digital humans will start to become just another member of the team, with added benefits for that team, and obviously the customers they serve.”']",0.1214444180579973,"Since OpenAI’s ChatGPT was launched in November 2022, considerable hype has surrounded the potential of generative AI — artificial intelligence powered by huge datasets of information, capable of generating text outputs in a conversational way.","However, alongside, this fear of replacement is bubbling up more and more.”",0.2107271328568458,"Harris, however, points to new opportunities within digital human design and development. “","However, there are widespread concerns about the impact AI could have on the job market.",2024-05-19 Why lab-grown diamond sales are surging,https://edition.cnn.com/2022/04/27/business/diamonds-manmade-demand/index.html," Published 7:49 AM EDT, Wed April 27, 2022 ","It’s proposal season, and engagements are on the rise. So are factory-made diamond sales. Not that you’d know the difference. Man-made diamonds look the same as naturally occurring ones. The only noticeable difference is the price tag. “The result is really stunning,” said Edahn Golan, an independent diamond industry analyst. He said March data showed the number of engagement rings sold that featured a manufactured diamond jumped 63% compared to last year, while the number of engagement rings sold with a natural diamond declined 25% in the same period. Going back by another month, to February, the data showed the number of rings sold with lab diamonds that month surged even more, to 80% compared to a year earlier while the number fell by 13% for natural diamond engagement rings. “The big fear in the natural diamonds industry is that consumers will start accepting lab-grown diamonds in engagement rings,” he said. Too late. “It’s actually happening.” Why are consumers flocking to man-made diamonds? Cost is the most obvious reason. The average retail price of the most popular one carat round man-made diamond for an engagement ring in March was $2,318, Golan said. “This is substantially less – as much as 73% cheaper – than a natural diamond of the same size, cut and clarity as the man-made diamond, which would cost $8,740,” he said. Plus, the lower cost allows couples to buy a bigger stone. “A lab diamond is a real diamond, but maybe it took a few weeks to make it,” said Golan. “Natural diamonds were formed over 800 million to three billion years and there isn’t an infinite supply of them.” This makes natural diamonds quite a bit more expensive, and prices are likely to rise as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has tightened the supply chain for natural raw diamonds. The sanctions directly target Alrosa, partly owned by the Russian government, which the US government identified as the world’s largest diamond mining company, accounting for 28% of global diamond output. Man-made diamonds are also becoming popular as consumers are more aware and educated about them, said Dan Moran, a third-generation diamond expert and owner of LA-based fine jeweler Concierge Diamonds. Moran said the typical buyer of man-made diamonds is typically younger than 40 and very budget conscious. Mined diamonds have a controversial history that’s tied to the use of child labor in some African diamond mines as well as sales of illegally-traded “conflict diamonds” that fund conflict in war-torn areas. Among Millennials and Gen Z, their eco-conscious mindset and ethical concerns about natural diamond sourcing is another factor influencing their preference for non-traditional engagement rings, according to a report from wedding planning website The Knot. Although its slice is growing, the market share for man-made diamonds remains relatively small. Currently, about 7% of the specialty diamond jewelry market is represented by man-made diamonds, up from 3% in 2020, said Golan. Some major jewelry retailers are driving the effort to take man-made diamonds mainstream. In 2021, the world’s largest jewelry company, Pandora (PANDY), made a major shift by announcing it would stop using mined diamonds and would swap to lab-created diamonds in its jewelry. Pandora said it’s instituting the change as part of an effort to sell sustainable jewelry, and also because consumers increasingly are asking for it. Signet, (SIG) the largest jewelry company in the United States (which owns Zales, Kay Jewelers and Jared chains) called out the popularity of lab diamond jewelry in its March earnings call with analysts. Calling it a “fast-growing category” in its jewelry portfolio, Signet CEO Virginia Drosos told analysts that lab-created diamonds are among the big jewelry trends she expects this year. The company said it has expanded its man-made bridal jewelry selection in both its Zales and Kay Jewelers stores in response to the increased demand. Fine jewelry brand Charles and Colvard, which makes lab-created diamonds, said consumers don’t just want to look good with the jewelry they are wearing, they also want to feel good about it. “As the momentum for conscious consumerism grows, the surge towards lab grown diamonds isn’t surprising,” said Don O’Connell, president and CEO of Charles & Colvard. “[Consumers] want to know the origins of their stones and be reassured they’re conflict-free. They’re embracing the choice to purchase a piece of fine jewelry that aligns with their values.” Lab-grown diamond brand VRAI said the pandemic, too, has sparked attention and action toward social and environmental issues. It said consumers are being more thoughtful and reassessing their purchasing habits, as well as the companies and industries they are supporting. There is, however, one important consideration for anyone buying lab-created diamonds: Man-made diamonds have little resale value. So while you may not be able to tell a natural diamond from a factory made variety, someone with a trained eye can, said Golan. Once a stone is identified as a factory diamond, even though you paid a lot less for it, you also won’t get much for it. But the value of a ring isn’t just monetary. “As a professional in the industry, I am asked all the time by people about what I think about a ring they have,” said Moran, of Concierge Jewelers. “I always say, if you love it, be happy with it. An engagement ring is a symbol of commitment and enduring love.”",CNN,27/04/2022,"['It’s proposal season, and engagements are on the rise.', 'So are factory-made diamond sales.', 'Not that you’d know the difference.', 'Man-made diamonds look the same as naturally occurring ones.', 'The only noticeable difference is the price tag.', '“The result is really stunning,” said Edahn Golan, an independent diamond industry analyst.', 'He said March data showed the number of engagement rings sold that featured a manufactured diamond jumped 63% compared to last year, while the number of engagement rings sold with a natural diamond declined 25% in the same period.', 'Going back by another month, to February, the data showed the number of rings sold with lab diamonds that month surged even more, to 80% compared to a year earlier while the number fell by 13% for natural diamond engagement rings.', '“The big fear in the natural diamonds industry is that consumers will start accepting lab-grown diamonds in engagement rings,” he said.', 'Too late. “', 'It’s actually happening.”', 'Why are consumers flocking to man-made diamonds?', 'Cost is the most obvious reason.', 'The average retail price of the most popular one carat round man-made diamond for an engagement ring in March was $2,318, Golan said.', '“This is substantially less – as much as 73% cheaper – than a natural diamond of the same size, cut and clarity as the man-made diamond, which would cost $8,740,” he said.', 'Plus, the lower cost allows couples to buy a bigger stone.', '“A lab diamond is a real diamond, but maybe it took a few weeks to make it,” said Golan. “', 'Natural diamonds were formed over 800 million to three billion years and there isn’t an infinite supply of them.”', 'This makes natural diamonds quite a bit more expensive, and prices are likely to rise as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has tightened the supply chain for natural raw diamonds.', 'The sanctions directly target Alrosa, partly owned by the Russian government, which the US government identified as the world’s largest diamond mining company, accounting for 28% of global diamond output.', 'Man-made diamonds are also becoming popular as consumers are more aware and educated about them, said Dan Moran, a third-generation diamond expert and owner of LA-based fine jeweler Concierge Diamonds.', 'Moran said the typical buyer of man-made diamonds is typically younger than 40 and very budget conscious.', 'Mined diamonds have a controversial history that’s tied to the use of child labor in some African diamond mines as well as sales of illegally-traded “conflict diamonds” that fund conflict in war-torn areas.', 'Among Millennials and Gen Z, their eco-conscious mindset and ethical concerns about natural diamond sourcing is another factor influencing their preference for non-traditional engagement rings, according to a report from wedding planning website The Knot.', 'Although its slice is growing, the market share for man-made diamonds remains relatively small.', 'Currently, about 7% of the specialty diamond jewelry market is represented by man-made diamonds, up from 3% in 2020, said Golan.', 'Some major jewelry retailers are driving the effort to take man-made diamonds mainstream.', 'In 2021, the world’s largest jewelry company, Pandora (PANDY), made a major shift by announcing it would stop using mined diamonds and would swap to lab-created diamonds in its jewelry.', 'Pandora said it’s instituting the change as part of an effort to sell sustainable jewelry, and also because consumers increasingly are asking for it.', 'Signet, (SIG) the largest jewelry company in the United States (which owns Zales, Kay Jewelers and Jared chains) called out the popularity of lab diamond jewelry in its March earnings call with analysts.', 'Calling it a “fast-growing category” in its jewelry portfolio, Signet CEO Virginia Drosos told analysts that lab-created diamonds are among the big jewelry trends she expects this year.', 'The company said it has expanded its man-made bridal jewelry selection in both its Zales and Kay Jewelers stores in response to the increased demand.', 'Fine jewelry brand Charles and Colvard, which makes lab-created diamonds, said consumers don’t just want to look good with the jewelry they are wearing, they also want to feel good about it.', '“As the momentum for conscious consumerism grows, the surge towards lab grown diamonds isn’t surprising,” said Don O’Connell, president and CEO of Charles & Colvard. “[', 'Consumers] want to know the origins of their stones and be reassured they’re conflict-free.', 'They’re embracing the choice to purchase a piece of fine jewelry that aligns with their values.”', 'Lab-grown diamond brand VRAI said the pandemic, too, has sparked attention and action toward social and environmental issues.', 'It said consumers are being more thoughtful and reassessing their purchasing habits, as well as the companies and industries they are supporting.', 'There is, however, one important consideration for anyone buying lab-created diamonds: Man-made diamonds have little resale value.', 'So while you may not be able to tell a natural diamond from a factory made variety, someone with a trained eye can, said Golan.', 'Once a stone is identified as a factory diamond, even though you paid a lot less for it, you also won’t get much for it.', 'But the value of a ring isn’t just monetary.', '“As a professional in the industry, I am asked all the time by people about what I think about a ring they have,” said Moran, of Concierge Jewelers. “', 'I always say, if you love it, be happy with it.', 'An engagement ring is a symbol of commitment and enduring love.”']",0.3714494325159568,"He said March data showed the number of engagement rings sold that featured a manufactured diamond jumped 63% compared to last year, while the number of engagement rings sold with a natural diamond declined 25% in the same period.",Mined diamonds have a controversial history that’s tied to the use of child labor in some African diamond mines as well as sales of illegally-traded “conflict diamonds” that fund conflict in war-torn areas.,0.8542834222316742,"Currently, about 7% of the specialty diamond jewelry market is represented by man-made diamonds, up from 3% in 2020, said Golan.","This makes natural diamonds quite a bit more expensive, and prices are likely to rise as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has tightened the supply chain for natural raw diamonds.",2024-05-19 Biden’s tariffs on Chinese imports are boosting these beaten-down stocks,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/investing/premarket-stocks-trading-clean-energy-biden-tariff/index.html," Published 7:43 AM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","A version of this story first appeared in CNN Business’ Before the Bell newsletter. Not a subscriber? You can sign up right here. You can listen to an audio version of the newsletter by clicking the same link. It’s not just meme stocks that saw a resurgence this week. Beaten-down clean energy stocks have rallied this week. The iShares Global Clean Energy exchange-traded fund, which tracks sectors from renewable electricity to semiconductors to solar energy, has gained roughly 3%. Plug Power shares have climbed 33%, Enphase Energy shares have gained 8% and NextEra Energy shares have added 4%. Behind the rally? President Joe Biden is raising tariffs on $18 billion in Chinese imports across sectors including steel and aluminum, electric vehicles, solar cells and medical products. The new rates range from 100% on electric vehicles to 50% on solar components to 25% for the other sectors, reports CNN’s Kayla Tausche. “China can’t be the only country that produces clean technology for the world we need,” a senior Biden administration official said. “We need diversified, not concentrated, production of our most critical goods and technologies. … That’s the kind of dynamic we think will produce resilient supply chains and clean technology.” Clean energy stocks were battered last year by supply chain snarls and sky-high interest rates, which drove up borrowing costs for growing companies trying to load up on capital. Hopes that an influx of US government spending on climate solutions would help revive the sector didn’t pan out, either. Higher rates also tend to make it more difficult for consumers to transition to using clean energy, since sources like a residential solar system can cost thousands of dollars and require a loan. While some investors hoped that the Federal Reserve would begin cutting rates this year, the central bank has continued to hold rates at a 23-year high. Some investors warn that though the tariffs could continue boosting clean energy stocks, the recent rally isn’t driven by just improving fundamentals. The surge is also in part due to traders’ willingness to take on more risk in their portfolios as stocks continue notching record highs, they say. “The investment thesis post-tariffs in the sector is better than it was before. But that doesn’t mean that all these companies are out of the woods,” Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive Brokers, told CNN. Wall Street’s large risk appetite was in full force this week. Shares of meme stocks such as GameStop and AMC Entertainment have swung wildly after the Roaring Kitty X account run by Keith Gill, a trader who helped spawn the 2021 meme stock frenzy, posted for the first time in three years. Meme stocks are shares of companies that tend to see wide swings based on their popularity on social media rather than their fundamentals. The Dow Jones Industrial Average broke past the 40,000 threshold Thursday for the first time ever, fueled by an encouraging inflation report, reports my colleague Nicole Goodkind. The blue-chip index briefly crossed the key threshold in morning trading before falling back below the line in the afternoon to close at 39,869, down 38 points, or 0.1%. All three major indexes closed lower on Thursday. The S&P 500 ended the day down 0.2% and the Nasdaq Composite was 0.3% lower. Markets had rallied to new record highs Wednesday after the latest Consumer Price Index showed a cooldown for the first time in months, stoking hopes that the Federal Reserve could start cutting interest rates as soon as September. On a monthly basis, the inflation report showed that prices rose 0.3%, a slower pace than in the two months prior, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Economists were expecting a 0.4% monthly increase, according to FactSet consensus estimates. Another key data point added to the enthusiasm: April retail sales came in significantly weaker than expected, indicating that consumers are pulling back on the spending that drives the economy. Spending missed the 0.4% increase that economists had projected. “This is the first good CPI report in four months and the market likes it,” said Gary Pzegeo, head of fixed income at CIBC Private Wealth US. “Taken [together with retail sales] this supports a Fed rate cut in the fall. Markets are discounting a cut in September and have moved to price in a second cut by December.” Read more here. A pair of recent ransomware attacks crippled computer systems at two major American health care firms, disrupting patient care and exposing fundamental weaknesses in the US health care system’s defenses against hackers, reports my colleague Sean Lyngaas. In both cases, federal officials and private cyber experts scrambled to try to limit the damage and get computers back online. But the cascading effects from the hacks, with ambulances diverted from hospitals and pharmacies unable to process insurance, has underscored for some US lawmakers, senior Biden administration officials and policy experts that the health care system is ill-prepared for the ripple effects of a cyberattack and needs new security regulations. Health care lags other industries, such as big financial institutions and energy providers, when it comes to IT security, according to some experts. “Industry has successfully demanded voluntary cybersecurity for years — and this is what we get,” Joshua Corman, a cybersecurity expert who has focused on the health sector for years, told CNN. Sen. Ron Wyden, the Oregon Democrat who chairs the finance committee, told CNN that “every new devastating hack hammers home the need for mandatory cybersecurity standards in the health care sector, particularly when it comes to the largest companies that millions of patients depend on for care and medicine.” Without action, the senator said, “patients’ access to care and their personal health information will be compromised and ransomed by hackers over and over again.” Read more here.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['A version of this story first appeared in CNN Business’ Before the Bell newsletter.', 'Not a subscriber?', 'You can sign upright here.', 'You can listen to an audio version of the newsletter by clicking the same link.', 'It’s not just meme stocks that saw a resurgence this week.', 'Beaten-down clean energy stocks have rallied this week.', 'The iShares Global Clean Energy exchange-traded fund, which tracks sectors from renewable electricity to semiconductors to solar energy, has gained roughly 3%.', 'Plug Power shares have climbed 33%, Enphase Energy shares have gained 8% and NextEra Energy shares have added 4%.', 'Behind the rally?', 'President Joe Biden is raising tariffs on $18 billion in Chinese imports across sectors including steel and aluminum, electric vehicles, solar cells and medical products.', 'The new rates range from 100% on electric vehicles to 50% on solar components to 25% for the other sectors, reports CNN’s Kayla Tausche.', '“China can’t be the only country that produces clean technology for the world we need,” a senior Biden administration official said. “', 'We need diversified, not concentrated, production of our most critical goods and technologies. …', 'That’s the kind of dynamic we think will produce resilient supply chains and clean technology.”', 'Clean energy stocks were battered last year by supply chain snarls and sky-high interest rates, which drove up borrowing costs for growing companies trying to load up on capital.', 'Hopes that an influx of US government spending on climate solutions would help revive the sector didn’t pan out, either.', 'Higher rates also tend to make it more difficult for consumers to transition to using clean energy, since sources like a residential solar system can cost thousands of dollars and require a loan.', 'While some investors hoped that the Federal Reserve would begin cutting rates this year, the central bank has continued to hold rates at a 23-year high.', 'Some investors warn that though the tariffs could continue boosting clean energy stocks, the recent rally isn’t driven by just improving fundamentals.', 'The surge is also in part due to traders’ willingness to take on more risk in their portfolios as stocks continue notching record highs, they say.', '“The investment thesis post-tariffs in the sector is better than it was before.', 'But that doesn’t mean that all these companies are out of the woods,”Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive Brokers, told CNN.', 'Wall Street’s large risk appetite was in full force this week.', 'Shares of meme stocks such as GameStop and AMC Entertainment have swung wildly after the Roaring Kitty X account run by Keith Gill, a trader who helped spawn the 2021 meme stock frenzy, posted for the first time in three years.', 'Meme stocks are shares of companies that tend to see wide swings based on their popularity on social media rather than their fundamentals.', 'The Dow Jones Industrial Average broke past the 40,000 threshold Thursday for the first time ever, fueled by an encouraging inflation report, reports my colleague Nicole Goodkind.', 'The blue-chip index briefly crossed the key threshold in morning trading before falling back below the line in the afternoon to close at 39,869, down 38 points, or 0.1%.', 'All three major indexes closed lower on Thursday.', 'The S&P 500 ended the day down 0.2% and the Nasdaq Composite was 0.3% lower.', 'Markets had rallied to new record highs Wednesday after the latest Consumer Price Index showed a cooldown for the first time in months, stoking hopes that the Federal Reserve could start cutting interest rates as soon as September.', 'On a monthly basis, the inflation report showed that prices rose 0.3%, a slower pace than in the two months prior, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.', 'Economists were expecting a 0.4% monthly increase, according to FactSet consensus estimates.', 'Another key data point added to the enthusiasm: April retail sales came in significantly weaker than expected, indicating that consumers are pulling back on the spending that drives the economy.', 'Spending missed the 0.4% increase that economists had projected.', '“This is the first good CPI report in four months and the market likes it,” said Gary Pzegeo, head of fixed income at CIBC Private Wealth US. “', 'Taken [together with retail sales] this supports a Fed rate cut in the fall.', 'Markets are discounting a cut in September and have moved to price in a second cut by December.”', 'Read more here.', 'A pair of recent ransomware attacks crippled computer systems at two major American health care firms, disrupting patient care and exposing fundamental weaknesses in the US health care system’s defenses against hackers, reports my colleague Sean Lyngaas.', 'In both cases, federal officials and private cyber experts scrambled to try to limit the damage and get computers back online.', 'But the cascading effects from the hacks, with ambulances diverted from hospitals and pharmacies unable to process insurance, has underscored for some US lawmakers, senior Biden administration officials and policy experts that the health care system is ill-prepared for the ripple effects of a cyberattack and needs new security regulations.', 'Health care lags other industries, such as big financial institutions and energy providers, when it comes to IT security, according to some experts.', '“Industry has successfully demanded voluntary cybersecurity for years — and this is what we get,” Joshua Corman, a cybersecurity expert who has focused on the health sector for years, told CNN.', 'Sen. Ron Wyden, the Oregon Democrat who chairs the finance committee, told CNN that “every new devastating hack hammers home the need for mandatory cybersecurity standards in the health care sector, particularly when it comes to the largest companies that millions of patients depend on for care and medicine.”', 'Without action, the senator said, “patients’ access to care and their personal health information will be compromised and ransomed by hackers over and over again.”', 'Read more here.']",0.2429109608178884,"Plug Power shares have climbed 33%, Enphase Energy shares have gained 8% and NextEra Energy shares have added 4%.",Markets are discounting a cut in September and have moved to price in a second cut by December.”,0.1154627113631277,"The iShares Global Clean Energy exchange-traded fund, which tracks sectors from renewable electricity to semiconductors to solar energy, has gained roughly 3%.","Another key data point added to the enthusiasm: April retail sales came in significantly weaker than expected, indicating that consumers are pulling back on the spending that drives the economy.",2024-05-19 "Bilt’s May Rent Day promotion: Redeem points toward rent, get free home decor",https://edition.cnn.com/cnn-underscored/travel/bilt-rent-day-promotion," Updated 4:22 PM EDT, Thu April 25, 2024 ","The Bilt Mastercard® (see rates and fees) has been incredibly popular since its inception in 2021. With a top-notch travel rewards program and the opportunity to earn points on rent with no transaction fees (up to 100,000 points per calendar year), it’s no surprise to see the card flourish over the past few years. In addition, Bilt Rewards — the loyalty program behind the Bilt Mastercard — offers lucrative promotions throughout the year, with the most popular known as Rent Day. With Bilt’s Rent Day promotion — which runs the first of every month — card members earn double points on all purchases (excluding rent) and can take advantage of a unique promotion that changes every month. Bilt typically announces these promotions just a few days before Rent Day. Bilt Rewards just announced the May edition of its monthly Rent Day promotion, and for better or for worse, it’s different from offers we’ve seen in the past. Instead of a travel-related offer (which has been the norm), Bilt is incentivizing members to redeem points toward their monthly rent payment in exchange for a credit toward home decor products in the Bilt Home Collection. Additionally, Bilt recently announced a new partnership with Blade, a swanky helicopter transfer service that runs scheduled flights between New York City airports and Manhattan’s heliports. Let’s take a closer look at this upcoming Rent Day promotion and Bilt’s partnership with Blade. Between April 25 and May 1, Bilt members who redeem points toward their rent payment will get 100% of those points back to redeem toward items in the Bilt Home Collection. You can use a minimum of 1,000 points and a maximum of 50,000 points for this offer, and the Home Collection credit is good for six months. However, your points are only worth 0.55 cents apiece when you redeem them toward your rent payment. For example, if you redeem 10,000 points toward rent, you’ll get a $55 discount. Travel website The Points Guy values Bilt Rewards points at 2.05 cents apiece when redeemed toward travel, so this isn’t a great redemption in comparison. However, it might be worth considering this month if you’re looking for new home decor anyway. The Bilt Home Collection usually has things like artwork from partner artists, interesting vases and different types of cups. This month, Bilt will also offer curated Rent Day dining experiences at restaurants around the country. This includes unique tasting menus, wine pairings and omakase experiences. These dining experiences will cost $150, or you can redeem 15,000 Bilt points for you and a guest. Availability will be limited, but you can try to grab a seat on April 26. Those with Bilt elite status will receive priority access to reservations. Platinum status members will have first access at 12 p.m. EST, Gold status members at 12:10 p.m. EST and Silver status members at 12:20 p.m. EST. All other Bilt Rewards members can book at 12:30 p.m. EST. Dining experiences will be available at select restaurants in New York, Miami, Seattle, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Dallas, Boston and Washington, D.C. Every month on Rent Day, Bilt also gives members with the Bilt Mastercard a chance to earn double points on all purchases (excluding rent). So, if you have a new restaurant you want to check out, flights to book or any other purchases to make, it could be worth waiting until May 1 to earn more points on your purchase. And if you’re dining at a restaurant that participates in Bilt Dining, you can increase your earnings up to a whopping 11 points per dollar. But remember, to earn Bilt points with your Bilt Mastercard, you must use the card five times each statement period (see Rewards & Benefits). Earlier this month, Bilt announced a new partnership with Blade, where Bilt Reward members will earn bonus points on every Blade booking. Members will earn 2 bonus points for every dollar spent on Blade flights as long as they pay with a credit or debit card linked to their Bilt Rewards account. Again, you’ll get more Blade benefits if you have Bilt elite status. These are nice benefits to have if you live in New York. Blade has lounges at its heliports on West 30th Street and East 34th Street, both of which are outfitted with a complimentary bar, coffee and free snacks. If getting a discount on rent is your preferred way to redeem Bilt Rewards points, this month’s Rent Day promotion is a great way to earn bonus points to put toward furnishing your home. If you’d rather redeem toward travel, focus on earning double points on all purchases on May 1. Learn more and apply now for the Bilt Mastercard. Looking for a travel credit card? Find out which cards CNN Underscored Money chose as the best travel credit cards currently available.",CNN,25/04/2024,"['The Bilt Mastercard® (seerates and fees) has been incredibly popular since its inception in 2021.', 'With a top-notch travel rewards program and the opportunity to earn points on rent with no transaction fees (up to 100,000 points per calendar year), it’s no surprise to see the card flourish over the past few years.', 'In addition, Bilt Rewards —the loyalty program behind the Bilt Mastercard — offers lucrative promotions throughout the year, with the most popular known as Rent Day.', 'With Bilt’s Rent Day promotion —which runs the first of every month — card members earn double points on all purchases (excluding rent) and can take advantage of a unique promotion that changes every month.', 'Bilt typically announces these promotions just a few days before Rent Day.', 'Bilt Rewards just announced the May edition of its monthly Rent Day promotion, and for better or for worse, it’s different from offers we’ve seen in the past.', 'Instead of a travel-related offer (which has been the norm), Bilt is incentivizing members to redeem points toward their monthly rent payment in exchange for a credit toward home decor products in the Bilt Home Collection.', 'Additionally, Bilt recently announced a new partnership with Blade,a swanky helicopter transfer service that runs scheduled flights between New York City airports and Manhattan’s heliports.', 'Let’s take a closer look at this upcoming Rent Day promotion and Bilt’s partnership with Blade.', 'Between April 25 and May 1, Bilt members who redeem points toward their rent payment will get 100% of those points back to redeem toward items in the Bilt Home Collection.', 'You can use a minimum of 1,000 points and a maximum of 50,000 points for this offer, and the Home Collection credit is good for six months.', 'However, your points are only worth 0.55 cents apiece when you redeem them toward your rent payment.', 'For example, if you redeem 10,000 points toward rent, you’ll get a $55 discount.', 'Travel website The Points Guy values Bilt Rewards points at 2.05 cents apiece when redeemed toward travel, so this isn’t a great redemption in comparison.', 'However, it might be worth considering this month if you’re looking for new home decor anyway.', 'The Bilt Home Collection usually has things like artwork from partner artists, interesting vases and different types of cups.', 'This month, Bilt will also offer curated Rent Day dining experiences at restaurants around the country.', 'This includes unique tasting menus, wine pairings and omakase experiences.', 'These dining experiences will cost $150, or you can redeem 15,000 Bilt points for you and a guest.', 'Availability will be limited, but you can try to grab a seat on April 26.', 'Those with Bilt elite status will receive priority access to reservations.', 'Platinum status members will have first access at 12 p.m. EST, Gold status members at 12:10 p.m. EST and Silver status members at 12:20 p.m. EST.', 'All other Bilt Rewards members can book at 12:30 p.m. EST.', 'Dining experiences will be available at select restaurants in New York, Miami, Seattle, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Dallas, Boston and Washington, D.C. Every month on Rent Day, Bilt also gives members with the Bilt Mastercard a chance to earn double points on all purchases (excluding rent).', 'So, if you have a new restaurant you want to check out, flights to book or any other purchases to make, it could be worth waiting until May 1 to earn more points on your purchase.', 'And if you’re dining at a restaurant that participates in Bilt Dining, you can increase your earnings up to a whopping 11 points per dollar.', 'But remember, to earn Bilt points with your Bilt Mastercard, you must use the card five times each statement period (see Rewards & Benefits).', 'Earlier this month, Bilt announced a new partnership with Blade, where Bilt Reward members will earn bonus points on every Blade booking.', 'Members will earn 2 bonus points for every dollar spent on Blade flights as long as they pay with a credit or debit card linked to their Bilt Rewards account.', 'Again, you’ll get more Blade benefits if you have Bilt elite status.', 'These are nice benefits to have if you live in New York.', 'Blade has lounges at its heliports on West 30th Street and East 34th Street, both of which are outfitted with a complimentary bar, coffee and free snacks.', 'If getting a discount on rent is your preferred way to redeem Bilt Rewards points, this month’s Rent Day promotion is a great way to earn bonus points to put toward furnishing your home.', 'If you’d rather redeem toward travel, focus on earning double points on all purchases on May 1.', 'Learn more and apply now for the Bilt Mastercard.', 'Looking for a travel credit card?', 'Find out which cardsCNN Underscored Moneychose as thebest travel credit cardscurrently available.']",0.3487739443917381,"Travel website The Points Guy values Bilt Rewards points at 2.05 cents apiece when redeemed toward travel, so this isn’t a great redemption in comparison.",,0.978265517950058,"And if you’re dining at a restaurant that participates in Bilt Dining, you can increase your earnings up to a whopping 11 points per dollar.",,2024-05-19 1 in 7 Gen Z credit card users are ‘maxed out’,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/business/gen-z-credit-card-users/index.html," Updated 3:35 PM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","Ariel Barnes plunged into a credit card debt spiral in college, and a decade later she’s yet to escape. Barnes has maxed out seven credit cards and is struggling to make minimum payments on $30,000 of credit card debt. “The interest is so high that it’s hard to get out of it,” Barnes, who is 28 years old and lives in Jackson, Mississippi, told CNN in a phone interview on Thursday. Barnes is hardly alone. Roughly one in seven (15.3%) Gen Z credit card borrowers have maxed out their credit cards, according to new research from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. (The NY Fed defined Gen Z as borrowers born between 1995 and 2011, though others mark the cut off as 1996 or 1997). By comparison, just 4.8% of Baby Boomer borrowers and 9.6% of Gen Xers have maxed out their credit cards, which can be a sign of a severely tight cash-flow problem. The findings underscore starkly different conditions masked by national economic statistics. Barnes blames bad financial decisions when she was in college for her current situation, which has forced her to live at home and delay major life events. “I want children. The clock is ticking. But I can’t afford to have any children,” she said. “I’ve had to go to therapy because it is a lot mentally.” More and more Americans of all ages are falling behind on their bills — especially credit card bills. The NY Fed found that for all debt outside of student loans, delinquency rates have been steadily rising since tumbling to historic lows during the Covid-19 pandemic. Credit card delinquencies have surpassed pre-pandemic levels and continue to rise. Severe credit card delinquencies, those 90 days overdue, have now climbed to 10.7% — the highest since 2012. The findings show how pockets of financial stress continue to emerge in the US economy following three years of high inflation. “It is worrisome that so many Gen Zers are falling behind,” said Ted Rossman, senior industry analyst at Bankrate.com. ”We’re seeing more people financing daily essentials such as groceries and gas, and this can be a tough cycle to break.” Even as stocks on Wall Street hit historic highs and unemployment remains unusually low, millions of Americans are struggling with the cost of living. “The rise in severe delinquencies — those over 90 days overdue — is a cause for concern,” said Gregory Daco, chief economist at EY. The NY Fed found there is a direct link between maxing out credit cards and falling behind on payments. Very few Americans who have used 20% or less of their credit card limit have fallen behind on their bills, according to the research. However, the transition rate into delinquency for those who have used more than 60% of their credit card limit has now surpassed pre-Covid levels and continues to rise, the NY Fed said. The researchers said this trend is “especially remarkable” for those who have maxed out their cards, defined as using 90% to 100% of their limit. A third of maxed-out borrowers have gone delinquent in the last year, compared with less than a quarter before the pandemic, the NY Fed said. “While most commentators discuss a soft landing for the economy or the consumer,” Daco said, “the latest evidence on credit conditions points to multiple economies, multiple consumers, affected to different degrees by the higher cost and higher interest rate environment.” Maxing out credit cards can hurt borrowers’ credit scores. Under FICO Score’s calculation, the ratio of balance-to-credit limit is the second most important category for determining credit scores. “FICO will be closely monitoring this trend in the coming quarters to better understand whether this is simply a reversion to pre-pandemic consumer behaviors,” Tommy Lee, senior director at FICO, told CNN in an email. The NY Fed explained that part of the reason Gen Z borrowers are maxed out is because they have much lower credit limits. Many younger Americans haven’t had the time to build credit histories and credit scores that would let them borrow more. For instance, the median Gen Z borrower’s credit limit is just $4,500, compared with $16,300 for Millennials and $21,800 for Gen X, the NY Fed said. The NY Fed declined to share historical data on maxed out credit cards by generation. During a call with reporters, NY Fed researchers explained that it’s a “typical age pattern” where younger borrowers have used up more of their credit card limit. Lee, the FICO executive, said history shows that as consumers age and their credit experience increases, so do their credit limits. Of course, it’s not just younger users maxing out their credit cards. The NY Fed found that borrowers who live in low-income areas are also more likely to be maxed out. About 12% of borrowers living in neighborhoods with the bottom 25% of incomes have maxed out their cards, the report found. That’s more than twice the 5.5% of borrowers living in the highest income neighborhoods who are maxed out. There’s never a good time to carry a credit card balance, but right now is arguably the worst time. The average credit card interest rate stands at 20.66%, according to Bankrate. That’s just shy of the record high of 20.75% set last month. Daco said officials at the Federal Reserve must take into account the credit card stress some Americans are feeling as they decide when to lower interest rates. The Fed faces a delicate balance. Cutting rates prematurely could make inflation worse. But waiting too long could pile even more pressure on borrowers, especially if the jobs market slows and more people struggle to find work. “The risk of over-tightening could lead to unintended consequences that further strain household finances,” Daco said. Experts say there are possible solutions for people who feel trapped by credit card debt. Rossman, the Bankrate analyst, said options include: “I know it’s easier said than done,” Rossman said, “but it’s so important to make credit card debt payoff a priority.” CNN’s Alicia Wallace contributed reporting.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['Ariel Barnes plunged into a credit card debt spiral in college, and a decade later she’s yet to escape.', 'Barnes has maxed out seven credit cards and is struggling to make minimum payments on $30,000 of credit card debt.', '“The interest is so high that it’s hard to get out of it,” Barnes, who is 28 years old and lives in Jackson, Mississippi, told CNN in a phone interview on Thursday.', 'Barnes is hardly alone.', 'Roughly one in seven (15.3%) Gen Z credit card borrowers have maxed out their credit cards, according tonew researchfrom the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. (', 'The NY Fed defined Gen Z as borrowers born between 1995 and 2011, thoughothers mark the cut offas 1996 or 1997).', 'By comparison, just 4.8% of Baby Boomer borrowers and 9.6% of Gen Xers have maxed out their credit cards, which can be a sign of a severely tight cash-flow problem.', 'The findings underscore starkly different conditions masked by national economic statistics.', 'Barnes blames bad financial decisions when she was in college for her current situation, which has forced her to live at home and delay major life events.', '“I want children.', 'The clock is ticking.', 'But I can’t afford to have any children,” she said. “', 'I’ve had to go to therapy because it is a lot mentally.”', 'More and more Americans of all ages are falling behind on their bills — especially credit card bills.', 'The NY Fed found that for all debt outside of student loans, delinquency rates have been steadily rising since tumbling to historic lows during the Covid-19 pandemic.', 'Credit card delinquencies have surpassed pre-pandemic levels and continue to rise.', 'Severe credit card delinquencies, those 90 days overdue, have now climbed to 10.7% — the highest since 2012.', 'The findings show how pockets of financial stress continue to emerge in the US economy following three years of high inflation.', '“It is worrisome that so many Gen Zers are falling behind,” said Ted Rossman, senior industry analyst at Bankrate.com. ”', 'We’re seeing more people financing daily essentials such as groceries and gas, and this can be a tough cycle to break.”', 'Even as stocks on Wall Street hit historic highs and unemployment remains unusually low, millions of Americans are struggling with the cost of living.', '“The rise in severe delinquencies — those over 90 days overdue — is a cause for concern,” said Gregory Daco, chief economist at EY.', 'The NY Fed found there is a direct link between maxing out credit cards and falling behind on payments.', 'Very few Americans who have used 20% or less of their credit card limit have fallen behind on their bills, according to the research.', 'However, the transition rate into delinquency for those who have used more than 60% of their credit card limit has now surpassed pre-Covid levels and continues to rise, the NY Fed said.', 'The researchers said this trend is “especially remarkable” for those who have maxed out their cards, defined as using 90% to 100% of their limit.', 'A third of maxed-out borrowers have gone delinquent in the last year, compared with less than a quarter before the pandemic, the NY Fed said.', '“While most commentators discuss a soft landing fortheeconomy ortheconsumer,” Daco said, “the latest evidence on credit conditions points to multiple economies, multiple consumers, affected to different degrees by the higher cost and higher interest rate environment.”', 'Maxing out credit cards can hurt borrowers’ credit scores.', 'Under FICO Score’s calculation, the ratio of balance-to-credit limit is the second most important category for determining credit scores.', '“FICO will be closely monitoring this trend in the coming quarters to better understand whether this is simply a reversion to pre-pandemic consumer behaviors,” Tommy Lee, senior director at FICO, told CNN in an email.', 'The NY Fed explained that part of the reason Gen Z borrowers are maxed out is because they have much lower credit limits.', 'Many younger Americans haven’t had the time to build credit histories and credit scores that would let them borrow more.', 'For instance, the median Gen Z borrower’s credit limit is just $4,500, compared with $16,300 for Millennials and $21,800 for Gen X, the NY Fed said.', 'The NY Fed declined to share historical data on maxed out credit cards by generation.', 'During a call with reporters, NY Fed researchers explained that it’s a “typical age pattern” where younger borrowers have used up more of their credit card limit.', 'Lee, the FICO executive, said history shows that as consumers age and their credit experience increases, so do their credit limits.', 'Of course, it’s not just younger users maxing out their credit cards.', 'The NY Fed found that borrowers who live in low-income areas are also more likely to be maxed out.', 'About 12% of borrowers living in neighborhoods with the bottom 25% of incomes have maxed out their cards, the report found.', 'That’s more than twice the 5.5% of borrowers living in the highest income neighborhoods who are maxed out.', 'There’s never a good time to carry a credit card balance, but right now is arguably the worst time.', 'The average credit card interest rate stands at 20.66%, according to Bankrate.', 'That’s just shy of the record high of 20.75% set last month.', 'Daco said officials at the Federal Reserve must take into account the credit card stress some Americans are feeling as they decide when to lower interest rates.', 'The Fed faces a delicate balance.', 'Cutting rates prematurely could make inflation worse.', 'But waiting too long could pile even more pressure on borrowers, especially if the jobs market slows and more people struggle to find work.', '“The risk of over-tightening could lead to unintended consequences that further strain household finances,” Daco said.', 'Experts say there are possible solutions for people who feel trapped by credit card debt.', 'Rossman, the Bankrate analyst, said options include: “I know it’s easier said than done,” Rossman said, “but it’s so important to make credit card debt payoff a priority.”', 'CNN’s Alicia Wallace contributed reporting.']",0.0378294012834936,"Under FICO Score’s calculation, the ratio of balance-to-credit limit is the second most important category for determining credit scores.","Barnes blames bad financial decisions when she was in college for her current situation, which has forced her to live at home and delay major life events.",-0.5344537430339389,"Severe credit card delinquencies, those 90 days overdue, have now climbed to 10.7% — the highest since 2012.","By comparison, just 4.8% of Baby Boomer borrowers and 9.6% of Gen Xers have maxed out their credit cards, which can be a sign of a severely tight cash-flow problem.",2024-05-19 Judge’s stern rebuke of Elon Musk’s X gives researchers fresh hope,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/tech/judges-stern-rebuke-of-elon-musks-x-gives-researchers-fresh-hope/index.html," Published 1:17 PM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","A federal judge’s decision this week reprimanding Elon Musk’s X will have reverberating effects on efforts to hold influential online platforms accountable, legal experts and advocacy groups say. On Monday, District Judge Charles Breyer dismissed and excoriated a lawsuit by X against online watchdog group Center for Countering Digital Hate as an attempt to silence the non-profit group for sounding alarms about hate speech on the platform. Breyer wrote in Monday’s order that the lawsuit was “unabashedly” about “punishing” reports written by CCDH, which X had accused of campaigning to drive away its advertisers. Breyer held that the reports were “unquestionably” protected by the group’s free speech rights. Now, that decision could embolden other research groups and Musk critics who have faced legal threats from the billionaire. The CCDH case — in the US District Court for the Northern District of California — has been widely viewed as a bellwether for research and accountability on X, where Musk has restored the accounts of previously banned White supremacists and spreaders of misinformation and where Musk himself has amplified various conspiracy theories. And CCDH is not the only organization that has faced attacks by self-proclaimed “free speech absolutist” Musk after criticizing or raising concerns about his platform. “This is an important decision that sees Elon Musk’s lawsuit for what it is — an effort to punish his critics for constitutionally protected speech and to deter researchers from studying his platform,” said Alex Abdo, litigation director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, which had filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case arguing that private companies should not be allowed to use breach of contract claims to punish criticism. “Society needs reliable and ethical research into social media platforms, and often that research relies on being able to study publicly available posts,” Abdo said. X said it plans to appeal Breyer’s decision. In his first year as owner of X, formerly known as Twitter, Musk threatened legal action against the Anti-Defamation League for defamation, as well as against Microsoft and Meta for allegedly improper data and trade secret access, respectively. None of those threats ever amounted to real lawsuits. He did, however, sue the progressive media watchdog Media Matters over its analysis highlighting antisemitic and pro-Nazi content on X, alleging that the group’s testing methodology was not representative of how real users experience the site and that the report was designed to drive away advertisers. Legal experts have described that case as “weak” on the merits and as a “bogus” attempt to chill criticism of X. This week’s court decision may be only a temporary setback in Musk’s wider plan to stifle criticism, said Media Matters CEO Angelo Carusone. Musk’s new playbook, Carusone said, enlists the help of sympathetic Republican attorneys general to investigate independent reporting organizations and tie them up in legal proceedings. The states of Texas and Missouri each announced probes into Media Matters following X’s lawsuit against the group, to which Musk responded, “Great!” As recently as Monday, Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey filed a petition in state court seeking to compel Media Matters’ cooperation with his investigation. The filing came a week after he appeared with Musk in a live event on X — which Carusone said shows how Musk hopes to deputize the power of government to silence his critics. “They have every reason to do it,” Carusone said of the AGs’ investigations. “They get the political benefits, they get the attention. There doesn’t seem to be any cost to them yet. And if they are successful at developing this new playbook, this new terrain, legally, then it’s going to pave the way for them to just use this tool and tactic over and over and over again.” A representative for X did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Carusone’s claims. Researchers from non-profits and academic institutions have had a harder time studying X since Musk’s takeover in 2022. Academics need large samples of posts, shares, likes and other data to study social media trends in mis- and disinformation, public health, elections and other key topics. But one of Musk’s first changes at X was to put access to platform data behind a steep paywall. Researchers and civil society groups said the new subscription fees — costing up to $2.5 million a year — were “outrageously expensive” and made it impossible to do their work, reducing transparency of a critical platform. The change may have forced some researchers to rely more heavily on first-person observational data to draw conclusions about user behavior on X. Groups like CCDH have also used automated “scraping” of publicly viewable content from X rather than paying the company for data directly, a tactic that helped give rise to X’s initial lawsuit. Efforts by X and other social media companies to limit research transparency makes them less accountable to the public at best and, at worst, could mask malicious behavior, said David Karpf, an associate professor in the School of Media and Public Affairs at George Washington University. “We need independent research to have any real measure of what’s going on at X/Twitter. Musk is only ever going to release data that makes his company look good,” Karpf said. “These platforms are too big and too vital to the spread of information to be left unmonitored.” “This is an election year,” Karpf added, “and the platforms are taking steps to make it harder to monitor how their services are used for malignant ends.” Free Press, another media accountability organization that has been critical of Musk’s leadership of X and which called for advertisers to pause their spending on the platform shortly after his takeover, also celebrated Breyer’s ruling as potentially removing at least one hurdle that watchdog organizations face. “The guardrails for democracy are hanging by a thread and we have dwindling insights into platform practices as researchers face lawsuits, congressional subpoenas and other scare tactics,” said Nora Benavidez, senior counsel and director of digital rights at Free Press. Ultimately, Benavidez called the ruling “a reminder that platform accountability is essential and will inevitably prevail when up against bullies like Musk who try to silence us.”",CNN,26/03/2024,"['A federal judge’s decision this week reprimanding Elon Musk’s X will have reverberating effects on efforts to hold influential online platforms accountable, legal experts and advocacy groups say.', 'On Monday, District Judge Charles Breyer dismissed and excoriated a lawsuit by X against online watchdog group Center for Countering Digital Hate as an attempt to silence the non-profit group for sounding alarms about hate speech on the platform.', 'Breyer wrote in Monday’s order that the lawsuit was “unabashedly” about “punishing” reports written by CCDH, which X had accused of campaigning to drive away its advertisers.', 'Breyer held that the reports were “unquestionably” protected by the group’s free speech rights.', 'Now, that decision could embolden other research groups and Musk critics who have faced legal threats from the billionaire.', 'The CCDH case — in the US District Court for the Northern District of California —has been widely viewed as a bellwether for research and accountability on X, where Musk has restored the accounts of previously banned White supremacists and spreaders of misinformation and where Musk himself has amplified various conspiracy theories.', 'And CCDH is not the only organization that has faced attacks by self-proclaimed “free speech absolutist” Musk after criticizing or raising concerns about his platform.', '“This is an important decision that sees Elon Musk’s lawsuit for what it is — an effort to punish his critics for constitutionally protected speech and to deter researchers from studying his platform,” said Alex Abdo, litigation director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, which had filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case arguing that private companies should not be allowed to use breach of contract claims to punish criticism.', '“Society needs reliable and ethical research into social media platforms, and often that research relies on being able to study publicly available posts,” Abdo said.', 'X said it plans to appeal Breyer’s decision.', 'In his first year as owner of X, formerly known as Twitter, Musk threatened legal action against the Anti-Defamation League for defamation, as well as against Microsoft and Meta for allegedly improper data and trade secret access, respectively.', 'None of those threats ever amounted to real lawsuits.', 'He did, however, sue the progressive media watchdog Media Matters over itsanalysishighlighting antisemitic and pro-Nazi content on X, alleging that the group’s testing methodology was not representative of how real users experience the site and that the report was designed to drive away advertisers.', 'Legal experts have described that case as “weak” on the merits and as a “bogus” attempt to chill criticism of X. This week’s court decision may be only a temporary setback in Musk’s wider plan to stifle criticism, said Media Matters CEO Angelo Carusone.', 'Musk’s new playbook, Carusone said, enlists the help of sympathetic Republican attorneys general to investigate independent reporting organizations and tie them up in legal proceedings.', 'The states of Texas and Missouri each announced probes into Media Matters following X’s lawsuit against the group, to which Musk responded, “Great!”', 'As recently as Monday, Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey filed a petition in state court seeking to compel Media Matters’ cooperation with his investigation.', 'The filing came a week after he appeared with Musk in a live event on X — which Carusone said shows how Musk hopes to deputize the power of government to silence his critics.', '“They have every reason to do it,” Carusone said of the AGs’ investigations. “', 'They get the political benefits, they get the attention.', 'There doesn’t seem to be any cost to them yet.', 'And if they are successful at developing this new playbook, this new terrain, legally, then it’s going to pave the way for them to just use this tool and tactic over and over and over again.”', 'A representative for X did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Carusone’s claims.', 'Researchers from non-profits and academic institutions have had a harder time studying X since Musk’s takeover in 2022.', 'Academics need large samples of posts, shares, likes and other data to study social media trends in mis- and disinformation, public health, elections and other key topics.', 'But one of Musk’s first changes at X was to put access to platform data behind a steep paywall.', 'Researchers and civil society groups said the new subscription fees — costing up to $2.5 million a year —were “outrageously expensive” and made it impossible to do their work, reducing transparency of a critical platform.', 'The change may have forced some researchers to rely more heavily on first-person observational data to draw conclusions about user behavior on X. Groups like CCDH have also used automated “scraping” of publicly viewable content from X rather than paying the company for data directly, a tactic that helped give rise to X’s initial lawsuit.', 'Efforts by X and other social media companies to limit research transparency makes them less accountable to the public at best and, at worst, could mask malicious behavior, said David Karpf, an associate professor in the School of Media and Public Affairs at George Washington University.', '“We need independent research to have any real measure of what’s going on at X/Twitter.', 'Musk is only ever going to release data that makes his company look good,” Karpf said. “', 'These platforms are too big and too vital to the spread of information to be left unmonitored.”', '“This is an election year,” Karpf added, “and the platforms are taking steps to make it harder to monitor how their services are used for malignant ends.”', 'Free Press, another media accountability organization that has been critical of Musk’s leadership of X and which called for advertisers to pause their spending on the platform shortly after his takeover, also celebrated Breyer’s ruling as potentially removing at least one hurdle that watchdog organizations face.', '“The guardrails for democracy are hanging by a thread and we have dwindling insights into platform practices as researchers face lawsuits, congressional subpoenas and other scare tactics,” said Nora Benavidez, senior counsel and director of digital rights at Free Press.', 'Ultimately, Benavidez called the ruling “a reminder that platform accountability is essential and will inevitably prevail when up against bullies like Musk who try to silence us.”']",0.0427064270235155,"Musk’s new playbook, Carusone said, enlists the help of sympathetic Republican attorneys general to investigate independent reporting organizations and tie them up in legal proceedings.","“This is an important decision that sees Elon Musk’s lawsuit for what it is — an effort to punish his critics for constitutionally protected speech and to deter researchers from studying his platform,” said Alex Abdo, litigation director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, which had filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case arguing that private companies should not be allowed to use breach of contract claims to punish criticism.",-0.3806276832308088,"Free Press, another media accountability organization that has been critical of Musk’s leadership of X and which called for advertisers to pause their spending on the platform shortly after his takeover, also celebrated Breyer’s ruling as potentially removing at least one hurdle that watchdog organizations face.","Researchers and civil society groups said the new subscription fees — costing up to $2.5 million a year —were “outrageously expensive” and made it impossible to do their work, reducing transparency of a critical platform.",2024-05-19 The world faces a shortage of minerals needed for the energy transition,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/business/critical-minerals-shortage-clean-energy/index.html," Published 6:54 AM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","The world is facing a shortage of the minerals needed to make the electric vehicles, wind turbines, solar panels, and other clean energy technologies essential to ending its reliance on fossil fuels. The Paris-based International Energy Agency said in a report published Friday that steep drops in the prices of lithium, cobalt, nickel, and graphite last year were “good news for consumers” but discouraged investment in the mining of those critical minerals. The world is on track meet only 70% of global copper demand and 50% of lithium demand by 2035, the agency added. “The world’s appetite for technologies such as solar panels, electric cars and batteries is growing fast — but we cannot satisfy it without reliable and expanding supplies of critical minerals,” Fatih Birol, the IEA’s executive director, said in a statement. Investment in critical minerals mining grew 10% last year, a rate the agency says is “healthy, but slower than in 2022.” The IEA forecast that investors would need to pour $800 billion into mining projects between now and 2040 to stand a chance of limiting the rise in global temperatures to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. Prices for some critical minerals have returned to their lower pre-pandemic levels, the IEA noted, with those needed to make batteries falling particularly sharply. The price declines were caused by a “strong increase” in supply that outpaced growth in demand over the past two years, the IEA said. However, “today’s well-supplied market may not be a good guide for the future, as demand for critical minerals continues to rise,” it added. Demand for graphite, for example, is projected to quadruple by 2040 from the current level if the world takes steps to avoid warming above 1.5 degrees. The price of lithium cratered 75% in 2023, while prices for cobalt, nickel and graphite plunged between 30% and 45%. Those falls helped drive down the price of batteries by 14%, according to the IEA. Concentration of critical minerals production in a small number of countries increases the risk of shortages, the agency warned. It expects that, between now and 2030, as much as 75% of growth in the supply of lithium, nickel, cobalt, and rare earth elements will come from just a handful of countries. For the types of graphite used in batteries, nearly 95% of supply growth will likely come from China, the IEA said. “These high levels of supply concentration represent a risk for the speed of energy transitions, as it makes supply chains and routes more vulnerable to disruption, whether from extreme weather, trade disputes or geopolitics,” the agency said. “High market concentration means there is a risk of significant shortfalls in supply if, for any reason, supply from the largest producing country is interrupted.” Scientists consider warming of 1.5 degrees a threshold beyond which extreme heat, floods, droughts, wildfires, and food and water shortages would have catastrophic consequences.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['The world is facing a shortage of the minerals needed to make the electric vehicles, wind turbines, solar panels, and other clean energy technologies essential to ending its reliance on fossil fuels.', 'The Paris-based International Energy Agency said in a report published Friday that steep drops in the prices of lithium, cobalt, nickel, and graphite last year were “good news for consumers” but discouraged investment in the mining of those critical minerals.', 'The world is on track meet only 70% of global copper demand and 50% of lithium demand by 2035, the agency added.', '“The world’s appetite for technologies such as solar panels, electric cars and batteries is growing fast — but we cannot satisfy it without reliable and expanding supplies of critical minerals,” Fatih Birol, the IEA’s executive director, said in a statement.', 'Investment in critical minerals mining grew 10% last year, a rate the agency says is “healthy, but slower than in 2022.”', 'The IEA forecast that investors would need to pour $800 billion into mining projects between now and 2040 to stand a chance of limiting the rise in global temperatures to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.', 'Prices for some critical minerals have returned to their lower pre-pandemic levels, the IEA noted, with those needed to make batteries falling particularly sharply.', 'The price declines were caused by a “strong increase” in supply that outpaced growth in demand over the past two years, the IEA said.', 'However, “today’s well-supplied market may not be a good guide for the future, as demand for critical minerals continues to rise,” it added.', 'Demand for graphite, for example, is projected to quadruple by 2040 from the current level if the world takes steps to avoid warming above 1.5 degrees.', 'The price of lithium cratered 75% in 2023, while prices for cobalt, nickel and graphite plunged between 30% and 45%.', 'Those falls helped drive down the price of batteries by 14%, according to the IEA.', 'Concentration of critical minerals production in a small number of countries increases the risk of shortages, the agency warned.', 'It expects that, between now and 2030, as much as 75% of growth in the supply of lithium, nickel, cobalt, and rare earth elements will come from just a handful of countries.', 'For the types of graphite used in batteries, nearly 95% of supply growth will likely come from China, the IEA said.', '“These high levels of supply concentration represent a risk for the speed of energy transitions, as it makes supply chains and routes more vulnerable to disruption, whether from extreme weather, trade disputes or geopolitics,” the agency said.', '“High market concentration means there is a risk of significant shortfalls in supply if, for any reason, supply from the largest producing country is interrupted.”', 'Scientists consider warming of 1.5 degrees athresholdbeyond which extreme heat, floods, droughts, wildfires, and food and water shortages would have catastrophic consequences.']",-0.1644841169578805,"The price declines were caused by a “strong increase” in supply that outpaced growth in demand over the past two years, the IEA said.","“These high levels of supply concentration represent a risk for the speed of energy transitions, as it makes supply chains and routes more vulnerable to disruption, whether from extreme weather, trade disputes or geopolitics,” the agency said.",0.118220567703247,"Investment in critical minerals mining grew 10% last year, a rate the agency says is “healthy, but slower than in 2022.”","Prices for some critical minerals have returned to their lower pre-pandemic levels, the IEA noted, with those needed to make batteries falling particularly sharply.",2024-05-19 "News publishers sound alarm on Google’s new AI-infused search, warn of ‘catastrophic’ impacts",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/15/media/google-gemini-ai-search-news-outlet-impact/index.html," Published 7:04 AM EDT, Wed May 15, 2024 ","Editor’s Note: A version of this article first appeared in the “Reliable Sources” newsletter. Sign up for the daily digest chronicling the evolving media landscape here. The A.I. doomsday clock appears ready to strike midnight for publishers. Google on Tuesday announced that it will infuse its ubiquitous search engine with its powerful artificial intelligence model, Gemini, drawing on the rapidly advancing technology to directly answer user queries at the top of results pages. “Google will do the Googling for you,” the company explained. In other words, users will soon no longer have to click on the links displayed in search results to find the information they are seeking. On its surface that might sound convenient, but for news publishers — many of whom are already struggling with steep traffic declines — the revamped search experience will likely cause an even further decrease in audience, potentially starving them of readers and revenue. Why spend time clicking on a link when Google has already scoured the internet and harvested the relevant information with its A.I.? “Google will take care of the legwork,” executives said. But a lot of that legwork, of course, comes in the form of human-written articles and expertise published across the internet on blogs and media outlets, all built on a foundation of advertising support. Google’s message was heard loud and clear. Within hours of the Mountain View announcement, the news industry began sounding the alarm. “This will be catastrophic to our traffic, as marketed by Google to further satisfy user queries, leaving even less incentive to click through so that we can monetize our content,” Danielle Coffey, the chief executive of the News/Media Alliance, bluntly told CNN. Coffey, whose organization represents more than 2,000 news publishers and has taken an aggressive posture toward A.I. developers’ use of journalism, added: “The little traffic we get today will be further diminished, and with a dominant search engine that’s cementing its market power, we once again have to adhere to their terms. This time with a product that directly competes with our content, using our content to fuel it. This is a perverse twist on ‘innovation.’” The announcement from Google, which newsrooms had expected and expressed worry over in both public and private forums in recent months, is poised to further batter an industry that has been dealt a series of brutal blows — much of it at the hands of Big Tech — over the last several years. It also comes as OpenAI reportedly readies to launch its own A.I.-powered search engine. Since ChatGPT crashed onto the scene more than a year ago, showcasing the potential power of A.I. for the public and setting off an arms race with Google, Meta and others, publishers have worried greatly about the impact the technology will ultimately have on their businesses. But they have had little time to plan their responses to the transformative technology, given the breakneck pace in which it has developed. Some newsrooms have chosen to cautiously lock arms with the technology giants, striking deals with OpenAI to license their deep archives of content. Others have taken a much different path, with The New York Times most notably filing a scorched Earth lawsuit against the ChatGPT creator. While publishers once worked hand-in hand with Big Tech companies (remember those days?), their relationships have soured tremendously in recent years. Mark Zuckerberg most publicly turned his back on the news industry, deprioritizing news articles on his platforms and shutting off other initiatives his company once championed. Google has maintained a better relationship with publishers but also faced sharp criticism. Most recently, it drew scorn after temporarily blocking some California news outlets from search results in response to a bill that would force it to pay publishers. On Tuesday, likely predicting the panic that its announcement would stir, Google argued that the A.I. changes would actually benefit news companies. Google told CNN it is showing more links with its AI Overviews feature and that by improving the search product, it will allow the company to send more traffic to web publishers. “We see that the links included in AI Overviews get more clicks than if the page had appeared as a traditional web listing for that query,” Google said in its announcement. “As we expand this experience, we’ll continue to focus on sending valuable traffic to publishers and creators.” But given Silicon Valley’s track record with publishers, it’s unlikely that the statement will give them much relief. And already there is skepticism over Google’s claims. “Our initial analysis suggests it will significantly reduce search traffic to content creators’ websites, directly impacting their ad revenue and, by extension, their livelihoods,” Marc McCollum, chief innovation officer at Raptive, which provides services to thousands of only creators and businesses, said in a statement. “This change could put the future of the open internet in danger.”",CNN,15/05/2024,"['Editor’s Note: A version of this article first appeared in the “Reliable Sources” newsletter.', 'Sign up for the daily digest chronicling the evolving media landscape here.', 'The A.I. doomsday clock appears ready to strike midnight for publishers.', 'Googleon Tuesday announced that it will infuse its ubiquitous search engine with its powerful artificial intelligence model,Gemini, drawing on the rapidly advancing technology to directly answer user queries at the top of results pages. “', 'Google will do the Googling for you,” the company explained.', 'In other words, users will soon no longer have to click on the links displayed in search results to find the information they are seeking.', 'On its surface that might sound convenient, but for news publishers — many of whom are already struggling with steep traffic declines — the revamped search experience will likely cause an evenfurtherdecrease in audience, potentially starving them of readers and revenue.', 'Why spend time clicking on a link when Google has already scoured the internet and harvested the relevant information with its A.I.?', '“Google will take care of the legwork,” executives said.', 'But a lot of that legwork, of course, comes in the form of human-written articles and expertise published across the internet on blogs and media outlets, all built on a foundation of advertising support.', 'Google’s message was heard loud and clear.', 'Within hours of the Mountain View announcement, the news industry began sounding the alarm.', '“This will be catastrophic to our traffic, as marketed by Google to further satisfy user queries, leaving even less incentive to click through so that we can monetize our content,”Danielle Coffey, the chief executive of theNews/Media Alliance, bluntly told CNN.', 'Coffey, whose organization represents more than 2,000 news publishers and has taken an aggressive posture toward A.I. developers’ use of journalism, added: “The little traffic we get today will be further diminished, and with a dominant search engine that’s cementing its market power, we once again have to adhere to their terms.', 'This time with a product that directly competes with our content, using our content to fuel it.', 'This is a perverse twist on ‘innovation.’”', 'The announcement from Google, which newsrooms had expected and expressed worry over in both public and private forums in recent months, is poised to further batter an industry that has been dealt a series of brutal blows —much of it at the hands of Big Tech— over the last several years.', 'It also comes asOpenAIreportedly readies to launch its own A.I.-powered search engine.', 'SinceChatGPTcrashed onto the scene more than a year ago, showcasing the potential power of A.I. for the public and setting off an arms race with Google,Metaand others, publishers have worried greatly about the impact the technology will ultimately have on their businesses.', 'But they have had little time to plan their responses to the transformative technology, given the breakneck pace in which it has developed.', 'Some newsrooms have chosen to cautiously lock arms with the technology giants, striking deals with OpenAI to license their deep archives of content.', 'Others have taken a much different path, withThe New York Timesmost notably filing a scorched Earth lawsuit against the ChatGPT creator.', 'While publishers once worked hand-in hand with Big Tech companies (remember those days?),', 'their relationships have soured tremendously in recent years.', 'Mark Zuckerbergmost publicly turned his back on the news industry, deprioritizing news articles on his platforms and shutting off other initiatives his company once championed.', 'Google has maintained a better relationship with publishers but also faced sharp criticism.', 'Most recently, itdrew scornafter temporarily blocking some California news outlets from search results in response to a bill that would force it to pay publishers.', 'On Tuesday, likely predicting the panic that its announcement would stir, Google argued that the A.I. changes would actually benefit news companies.', 'Google told CNN it is showing more links with its AI Overviews feature and that by improving the search product, it will allow the company to send more traffic to web publishers.', '“We see that the links included in AI Overviews get more clicks than if the page had appeared as a traditional web listing for that query,” Google said in its announcement. “', 'As we expand this experience, we’ll continue to focus on sending valuable traffic to publishers and creators.”', 'But given Silicon Valley’s track record with publishers, it’s unlikely that the statement will give them much relief.', 'And already there is skepticism over Google’s claims.', '“Our initial analysis suggests it will significantly reduce search traffic to content creators’ websites, directly impacting their ad revenue and, by extension, their livelihoods,”Marc McCollum, chief innovation officer atRaptive, which provides services to thousands of only creators and businesses,said in a statement. “', 'This change could put the future of the open internet in danger.”']",0.0093482011491545,"Googleon Tuesday announced that it will infuse its ubiquitous search engine with its powerful artificial intelligence model,Gemini, drawing on the rapidly advancing technology to directly answer user queries at the top of results pages. “","On its surface that might sound convenient, but for news publishers — many of whom are already struggling with steep traffic declines — the revamped search experience will likely cause an evenfurtherdecrease in audience, potentially starving them of readers and revenue.",-0.2209409663551732,"Google told CNN it is showing more links with its AI Overviews feature and that by improving the search product, it will allow the company to send more traffic to web publishers.",their relationships have soured tremendously in recent years.,2024-05-19 Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama vote against unionizing in blow to big UAW push,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/business/uaw-mercedes-benz-rejected/index.html," Updated 5:46 PM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","Autoworkers at a Mercedes Benz plant in Alabama voted against joining the United Auto Workers union Friday, potentially stalling hopes of a rapidly growing organizing wave for autoworkers in the southern United States. The result was a close outcome. Out of the valid votes counted, 56% of workers voted “no,” while 44% voted “yes” for unionization, according to Mercedes-Benz. The National Labor Relations Board said Friday there were more than 5,000 eligible voters. The UAW was hoping to carry its strong momentum with the Alabama vote, as its decision to use a “stand up strike” strategy, hitting the Big Three automakers all at once, brought unprecedented attention and record contracts for workers. And last month, it won a union election at a Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, its first victory in three attempts to organize the factory. Under relatively new UAW president Shawn Fain, the UAW had shifted its strategy for a membership push in non-unionized factories, many of which are located in the American South. In a March interview with Car and Driver, Fain said the profit margins for the Japanese, Korean and German automakers were “obscenely more gross than they were at the Big Three, and yet their workers get less.” “I truly believe we’re going to see a huge shift this year. I think we’re gonna win in the South,” he said in the interview. In a press conference Friday, however, Fain said that losses are part of the process and that the union will “carry on and keep on fighting.” “Not the result we wanted today, but I’m very proud of these workers. We keep our heads up and we march on,” Fain said. In an emailed statement Friday, Fain said the Alabama workers “won serious gains in this campaign.” Fain said they raised wages with the “UAW bump,” which is when non-union companies gave non-unionized employees raises to compete with union contracts. Mercedes-Benz also named a new Alabama CEO ahead of the election. Fain said Mercedes encouraged workers to give the new CEO a chance before elections. “That’s exactly what Volkswagen told its workers in 2019. And in 2024, Volkswagen workers realized it’s not about a CEO. It’s about a voice on the job, it’s about getting our lives back, and getting our time back. The only path to do that is through a union contract,” he wrote. In a statement, Mercedes-Benz US International said that “our goal throughout this process was to ensure every eligible Team Member had the opportunity to participate in a fair election.” “At MBUSI, our primary focus is always to provide a safe and supportive work environment for our Team Members, so they can build superior vehicles for the world. We look forward to continuing to work directly with our Team Members to ensure MBUSI is not only their employer of choice, but a place they would recommend to friends and family,” the statement continued. Six southern governors from Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas issued a joint statement in April discouraging the union campaign, warning it could put workers’ jobs, as well as the auto industry in the South, in jeopardy. The statement came a day before workers at Volkswagen voted on joining the UAW. “The reality is companies have choices when it comes to where to invest and bring jobs and opportunity. We have worked tirelessly on behalf of our constituents to bring good-paying jobs to our states. These jobs have become part of the fabric of the automotive manufacturing industry,” the statement said. In a statement Friday, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey said that “automotive manufacturing is one of Alabama’s crown jewel industries” and that the state is “committed to keeping it that way.” “The workers in Vance have spoken, and they have spoken clearly! Alabama is not Michigan, and we are not the Sweet Home to the UAW,” Ivey said in the statement. Mercedes allegedly pushed back against unionization efforts in other ways, according to the UAW. The National Labor Relations Board said it is investigating six unfair labor practice allegations filed by the UAW against Mercedes-Benz since March. Those accusations from the UAW allege Mercedes disciplined employees for discussing unionization during work, prohibited distribution of union materials, surveilled employees, and forced employees to attend “captive audience meetings,” which is a mandatory meeting during work hours meant to discourage unionizing. Mercedes-Benz US International denied these claims, and said in a statement it “has not interfered with or retaliated against any Team Member in their right to pursue union representation.” It continued, “We do not believe these claims have merit and we look forward to presenting our case to the NLRB.” The UAW said it began an effort to organize workers at 13 non-union auto US factories in November 2023. The effort included three US-based electric vehicle makers — Tesla, Rivian and Lucid — as well as 10 foreign automakers that build cars in the US — BMW, Honda, Hyundai, Mazda, Mercedes, Nissan, Subaru, Toyota, Volkswagen, and Volvo. The South has been an attractive region for foreign automakers to open plants because of generous tax breaks and cheaper, non-union labor that generally doesn’t receive the wages or benefits won by unionized workers. But last month, hourly workers at Volkswagen’s plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, overwhelmingly voted to join the UAW — 73% of the 3,600 workers at the plant who cast ballots had voted to join the union. The Chattanooga victory didn’t come easy for the UAW. Volkswagen didn’t win until its third union drive, said Art Wheaton, director of labor studies at Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations’ Buffalo office. This was the Mercedes plant’s first strong push, and labor experts say a loss at Mercedes isn’t the end of the push to organize the South. “It’s not a catastrophe if they don’t win (the first time). Primarily because they’re facing a very active Mercedes Benz trying to block them from organizing, you got governors in the South trying to block them from organizing, and they don’t have the same track record or history or infrastructure in Alabama,” Wheaton said to CNN earlier this week. In a press conference Friday, Fain said the difference between Mercedes and Volkswagen was that “Volkswagen was more neutral.” “Until we can have an absolute, neutral, free and fair election… This is the fight we have to take on,” Fain said. There are about 150,000 workers at nonunion auto plants in the United States today. That’s roughly the same amount of workers represented at the Big Three. Since 1990, the South’s share of auto jobs has doubled from around 15% to 30% today, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. Meanwhile, the Midwest’s share has declined from 60% to 45%. “It’s not horrible if they lose, because it gives the UAW the chance to see where they’re at. They can gauge how much support they have,” Wheaton said. This story has been updated with additional developments and context. - CNN’s Chris Isidore and Nathaniel Meyersohn contributed to this report.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['Autoworkers at a Mercedes Benz plant in Alabama voted against joining the United Auto Workers union Friday, potentially stalling hopes of a rapidly growing organizing wave for autoworkers in the southern United States.', 'The result was a close outcome.', 'Out of the valid votes counted, 56% of workers voted “no,” while 44% voted “yes” for unionization, according to Mercedes-Benz.', 'The National Labor Relations Board said Friday there were more than 5,000 eligible voters.', 'The UAW was hoping to carry its strong momentum with the Alabama vote, as its decision to use a“stand up strike” strategy,hitting the Big Three automakers all at once, brought unprecedented attention and record contracts for workers.', 'And last month, it won a union election at aVolkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, its first victory in three attempts to organize the factory.', 'Under relatively new UAW president Shawn Fain, the UAW had shifted its strategy for a membership push in non-unionized factories, many of which are located in the American South.', 'In a March interview with Car and Driver, Fain said the profit margins for the Japanese, Korean and German automakerswere “obscenely more gross than they were at the Big Three, and yet their workers get less.”', '“I truly believe we’re going to see a huge shift this year.', 'I think we’re gonna win in the South,”he said in the interview.', 'In a press conference Friday, however, Fain said that losses are part of the process and that the union will “carry on and keep on fighting.”', '“Not the result we wanted today, but I’m very proud of these workers.', 'We keep our heads up and we march on,” Fain said.', 'In an emailed statement Friday, Fain said the Alabama workers “won serious gains in this campaign.”', 'Fain said they raised wages with the “UAW bump,” which is when non-union companies gave non-unionized employees raises to compete with union contracts.', 'Mercedes-Benz also named a new Alabama CEO ahead of the election.', 'Fain said Mercedes encouraged workers to give the new CEO a chance before elections.', '“That’s exactly what Volkswagen told its workers in 2019.', 'And in 2024, Volkswagen workers realized it’s not about a CEO.', 'It’s about a voice on the job, it’s about getting our lives back, and getting our time back.', 'The only path to do that is through a union contract,” he wrote.', 'In a statement, Mercedes-Benz US International said that “our goal throughout this process was to ensure every eligible Team Member had the opportunity to participate in a fair election.”', '“At MBUSI, our primary focus is always to provide a safe and supportive work environment for our Team Members, so they can build superior vehicles for the world.', 'We look forward to continuing to work directly with our Team Members to ensure MBUSI is not only their employer of choice, but a place they would recommend to friends and family,” the statement continued.', 'Six southern governors from Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas issueda joint statement in April discouraging the union campaign, warning it could put workers’ jobs, as well as the auto industry in the South, in jeopardy.', 'The statement came a day before workers at Volkswagen voted on joining the UAW.', '“The reality is companies have choices when it comes to where to invest and bring jobs and opportunity.', 'We have worked tirelessly on behalf of our constituents to bring good-paying jobs to our states.', 'These jobs have become part of the fabric of the automotive manufacturing industry,” the statementsaid.', 'In a statement Friday, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey said that “automotive manufacturing is one of Alabama’s crown jewel industries” and that the state is “committed to keeping it that way.”', '“The workers in Vance have spoken, and they have spoken clearly!', 'Alabama is not Michigan, and we are not the Sweet Home to the UAW,” Ivey said in the statement.', 'Mercedes allegedly pushed back against unionization efforts in other ways, according to the UAW.', 'The National Labor Relations Board said it is investigating six unfair labor practice allegations filed by the UAW against Mercedes-Benz since March.', 'Those accusations from the UAW allege Mercedes disciplined employees for discussing unionization during work, prohibited distribution of union materials, surveilled employees, and forced employees to attend “captive audience meetings,” which is a mandatory meeting during work hours meant to discourage unionizing.', 'Mercedes-Benz US International denied these claims, and said in a statement it “has not interfered with or retaliated against any Team Member in their right to pursue union representation.”', 'It continued, “We do not believe these claims have merit and we look forward to presenting our case to the NLRB.”', 'The UAWsaid it began an effort to organize workers at 13 non-union auto US factories in November 2023.', 'The effort included three US-based electric vehicle makers — Tesla, Rivian and Lucid — as well as 10 foreign automakers that build cars in the US — BMW, Honda, Hyundai, Mazda, Mercedes, Nissan, Subaru, Toyota, Volkswagen, and Volvo.', 'The South has been an attractive region for foreign automakers to open plants because of generous tax breaks and cheaper, non-union labor that generally doesn’t receive the wages or benefits won by unionized workers.', 'But last month, hourly workers at Volkswagen’s plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, overwhelmingly voted to join the UAW — 73% of the 3,600 workers at the plant who cast ballots had voted to join the union.', 'The Chattanooga victory didn’t come easy for the UAW.', 'Volkswagen didn’t win until its third union drive, said Art Wheaton, director of labor studies atCornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations’ Buffalo office.', 'This was the Mercedes plant’s first strong push, and labor experts say a loss at Mercedes isn’t the end of the push to organize the South.', '“It’s not a catastrophe if they don’t win (the first time).', 'Primarily because they’re facing a very active Mercedes Benz trying to block them from organizing, you got governors in the South trying to block them from organizing, and they don’t have the same track record or history or infrastructure in Alabama,” Wheaton said to CNN earlier this week.', 'In a press conference Friday, Fain said the difference between Mercedes and Volkswagen was that “Volkswagen was more neutral.”', '“Until we can have an absolute, neutral, free and fair election… This is the fight we have to take on,” Fain said.', 'There are about 150,000 workers at nonunion auto plants in the United States today.', 'That’s roughly the same amount of workers represented at the Big Three.', 'Since 1990, the South’s share of auto jobs has doubled from around 15% to 30% today, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.', 'Meanwhile, the Midwest’s share has declined from 60% to 45%.', '“It’s not horrible if they lose, because it gives the UAWthe chance to see where they’re at.', 'They can gauge how much support they have,” Wheaton said.', 'This story has been updated with additional developments and context.', '- CNN’s Chris Isidore and Nathaniel Meyersohn contributed to this report.']",0.2225766872777374,"The South has been an attractive region for foreign automakers to open plants because of generous tax breaks and cheaper, non-union labor that generally doesn’t receive the wages or benefits won by unionized workers.","Those accusations from the UAW allege Mercedes disciplined employees for discussing unionization during work, prohibited distribution of union materials, surveilled employees, and forced employees to attend “captive audience meetings,” which is a mandatory meeting during work hours meant to discourage unionizing.",0.5178182306496993,"Since 1990, the South’s share of auto jobs has doubled from around 15% to 30% today, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.","Meanwhile, the Midwest’s share has declined from 60% to 45%.",2024-05-19 Many high schools are curbing the use of AI. These schools are leaning in,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/tech/ai-high-school/index.html," Updated 10:11 AM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","At Princeton High School, students are trying to combat the rapid decline of indigenous languages with some unlikely help: a furry, wide-eyed stuffed animal named Che’w. But Che’w isn’t a standard plush toy. He’s a wildly intelligent generative AI robot that speaks Mam, a Mayan language spoken in the western highlands of Guatemala and Mexico and by a small population of the school’s students. The language is currently at risk of extinction, according to UNESCO; the students hope Che’w can help change that. At a time when some high schools are restricting the use of AI in the classroom, others, like Princeton High School, are leaning into it. In the short 18 months since the launch of viral chatbot ChatGPT, generative AI has emerged as a revolutionary technology in the field of artificial intelligence. Its capabilities have impressed both users and experts with its ability to perform a range of tasks, from generating creative content, essays and games to conducting mathematical equations, summarizing complicated concepts and more. All that is already reshaping various parts of our lives, including education. But the technology has leaped ahead far faster, in many cases, than schools’ understanding of how to use it. And with new products out this week from Google’s XYZ initiative and OpenAI’s new GPT-4o, many teachers and districts realize they cannot avoid the subject. Dr. Joy Barnes-Johnson, the science administrator for PHS, said the school is “trying to embrace AI” as much as possible. “It’s a tool, just like a pencil is technology that helps communication.” She said the school will host an AI summit this summer with its teachers and administrators to have a conversation about how generative AI should or shouldn’t be used in the classroom. “In the beginning of the school year, we talked about how AI is the world we’re in now and we have a responsibility to prepare kids for the world they will inherit,” she said. “The idea is that it will help people connect and learn, so we [as teachers] have to not be afraid of it.” When ChatGPT launched in November 2022, teachers worried that the tool, which can generate convincing responses and essays in response to user prompts, could make it easier for students to cheat on assignments. Some also worried ChatGPT and similar tools could be used to spread inaccurate information. Not long after its launch, New York City public schools became one of the first school districts to ban students and teachers from using ChatGPT on the district’s networks and devices. Other schools reacted similarly in the weeks and months that followed, including the Los Angeles Unified School District and Seattle Public Schools, which blocked access to ChatGPT on their networks. Some of these districts have evolved their policies over time. The LAUSD, for example, has since launched a chatbot named “Ed” to act as a student advisor, with the ability to inform parents about information ranging from children’s test results to their school attendance. Many schools also continue to grapple with how to best approach the technology inside the classroom. “There is acceptance by educators, but we’re still seeing a lot of caution,” said Noel Candelaria, the secretary-treasurer of the National Education Association who is leading the charge around the union’s AI policy. “The challenge is there isn’t a lot of guidance on the district level, so the concern educators have is that it’s being something done to them, instead of with them.” He added: “There are also major concerns around data confidentiality and where data is being pulled from.” Candelaria told CNN that educators feel strongly that they want their voice to influence how it can be applied to schools. The NEA is developing a task force with educators across the country to address many of these issues. Some high schools around the country are trying to teach students how to use other forms of artificial intelligence for a greater good. At one prestigious public school in New York City, Stuyvesant High School, students created an app for the blind that uses artificial intelligence and tactile feedback to help people detect threats and navigate obstacles. Similarly, at STEM School Highlands Ranch in Colorado, a team of students developed an AI-powered wildlife detection system called Project Deer to help cut down on car crashes. Although researchers have tried to combat such accidents before, studies have shown wildlife don’t consistently react to any one stimulus. So the students instead derived an AI-based predictive solution to alert the driver to an imminent threat on the road. Using four $5 infrared detection sensors placed on vehicles, the students developed a system for AI to scan the surroundings and emit a high-pitched sound when an animal’s body heat is detected, a signal that may help to scare the animal away. The school, which was the Colorado State Winner in Samsung’s annual Solve for Tomorrow competition, said it is partnering with the University of Colorado in Boulder this summer to help boost its success rate. The Solve for Tomorrow contest featured more than 1,000 schools submitting STEM-based solutions to real-world problems. Samsung told CNN there was a “definite uptick in” submitted AI-powered innovations this year compared to previous years. Computer science teacher Tylor Chacon told CNN the group’s big vision is to one day have the technology regulated or adopted by the state for greater use. School administration has told teachers to help create rubrics or lesson plans, Chacon told CNN. “We’ve been encouraged to embrace it and look into ways we can use it to maximize our own job effectiveness and ease the burden on us,” he said. It’s an increasingly common trend among teachers to use AI tools to create assignments, quizzes, polls, videos and interactives for classroom use. Some are even turning to AI tools and platforms — such as ChatGPT, Writable, Grammarly and EssayGrader — to assist with grading papers or writing feedback, a practice that is also raising ethical considerations. Still, as schools continue to weigh the benefits or disadvantages to teaching and using artificial intelligence, some teachers and administrators feel strongly that it’s the future. At Princeton High, a group of about 14 students met during school hours for months to build out Che’w’s conversational capabilities, drawn from artificial intelligence neural networks that are trained to recognize patterns, solve problems and understand words, sentences and phrases from spoken and written language. Che’w, which translates to “star” in Mam, was trained to understand the language by the students so it can serve as a personal tutor. The robot is also trained to speak Spanish and English. “It doesn’t lose patience or get sick of talking to them,” said Mark Eastburn, Princeton High School’s science, research and engineering teacher. “It’s taking [AI] off the screen and putting it onto a physical structure that looks like a friend that can help you do whatever you need to do.” In April, the students were one of the top three National Winners at the Samsung Solve For Tomorrow’s competition. AI is now a part of students’ lives, Eastburn said. “And it will be there when they’re in college and also in their careers,” he added, “so they might as well learn and use it in appropriate ways in high school, if not even earlier.”",CNN,17/05/2024,"['At Princeton High School, students are trying to combat the rapid decline of indigenous languages with some unlikely help: a furry, wide-eyed stuffed animal named Che’w.', 'But Che’w isn’t a standard plush toy.', 'He’s a wildly intelligent generative AI robot that speaks Mam, a Mayan language spoken in the western highlands of Guatemala and Mexico and by a small population of the school’s students.', 'The language is currently at risk of extinction, according to UNESCO; the students hope Che’w can help change that.', 'At a time when some high schools are restricting the use of AI in the classroom, others, like Princeton High School, are leaning into it.', 'In the short 18 months since the launch of viral chatbot ChatGPT, generative AI has emerged as a revolutionary technology in the field of artificial intelligence.', 'Its capabilities have impressed both users and experts with its ability to perform a range of tasks, from generating creative content, essays and games to conducting mathematical equations, summarizing complicated concepts and more.', 'All that is already reshaping various parts of our lives, including education.', 'But the technology has leaped ahead far faster, in many cases, than schools’ understanding of how to use it.', 'And with new products out this week from Google’s XYZ initiative and OpenAI’s new GPT-4o, many teachers and districts realize they cannot avoid the subject.', 'Dr. Joy Barnes-Johnson, the science administrator for PHS, said the school is “trying to embrace AI” as much as possible. “', 'It’s a tool, just like a pencil is technology that helps communication.”', 'She said the school will host an AI summit this summer with its teachers and administrators to have a conversation about how generative AI should or shouldn’t be used in the classroom.', '“In the beginning of the school year, we talked about how AI is the world we’re in now and we have a responsibility to prepare kids for the world they will inherit,” she said. “', 'The idea is that it will help people connect and learn, so we [as teachers] have to not be afraid of it.”', 'When ChatGPT launched in November 2022, teachers worried that the tool, which can generate convincing responses and essays in response to user prompts, could make it easier for students to cheat on assignments.', 'Some also worried ChatGPT and similar tools could be used to spread inaccurate information.', 'Not long after its launch, New York City public schools became one of the first school districts to ban students and teachers from using ChatGPT on the district’s networks and devices.', 'Other schools reacted similarly in the weeks and months that followed, including the Los Angeles Unified School District and Seattle Public Schools, which blocked access to ChatGPT on their networks.', 'Some of these districts have evolved their policies over time.', 'The LAUSD, for example, has since launched a chatbot named “Ed” to act as a student advisor, with the ability to inform parents about information ranging from children’s test results to their school attendance.', 'Many schools also continue to grapple with how to best approach the technology inside the classroom.', '“There is acceptance by educators, but we’re still seeing a lot of caution,” said Noel Candelaria, the secretary-treasurer of the National Education Association who is leading the charge around the union’s AI policy. “', 'The challenge is there isn’t a lot of guidance on the district level, so the concern educators have is that it’s being something done to them, instead of with them.”', 'He added: “There are also major concerns around data confidentiality and where data is being pulled from.”', 'Candelaria told CNN that educators feel strongly that they want their voice to influence how it can be applied to schools.', 'The NEA is developing a task force with educators across the country to address many of these issues.', 'Some high schools around the country aretrying to teach students how to use other forms of artificial intelligence for a greater good.', 'At one prestigious public school in New York City, Stuyvesant High School, students created an app for the blind that uses artificial intelligence and tactile feedback to help people detect threats and navigate obstacles.', 'Similarly, at STEM School Highlands Ranch in Colorado, a team of students developed an AI-poweredwildlife detection system called Project Deer to help cut down on car crashes.', 'Although researchers have tried to combat such accidents before, studies have shown wildlife don’t consistently react to any one stimulus.', 'So the students instead derived an AI-based predictive solution to alert the driver to an imminent threat on the road.', 'Using four $5 infrared detection sensors placed on vehicles, the students developed a system forAI to scan the surroundings and emit a high-pitched sound when an animal’s body heat is detected, a signal that may help to scare the animal away.', 'The school, which was theColorado State Winner in Samsung’s annual Solve for Tomorrow competition, said it is partnering with the University of Colorado in Boulder this summer to help boost its success rate.', 'The Solve for Tomorrow contest featured more than 1,000 schools submitting STEM-based solutions to real-world problems.', 'Samsung told CNN there was a “definite uptick in” submitted AI-powered innovations this year compared to previous years.', 'Computer science teacher Tylor Chacon told CNN the group’s big vision is to one day have the technology regulated or adopted by the state for greater use.', 'School administration has told teachers to help create rubrics or lesson plans, Chacon told CNN. “', 'We’ve been encouraged to embrace it and look into ways we can use it to maximize our own job effectiveness and ease the burden on us,” he said.', 'It’s an increasingly common trend among teachers to use AI tools to create assignments, quizzes, polls, videos and interactives for classroom use.', 'Some are even turning to AI tools and platforms — such as ChatGPT, Writable, Grammarly and EssayGrader — to assist with grading papers or writing feedback, a practice that is also raising ethical considerations.', 'Still, as schools continue to weigh the benefits or disadvantages to teaching and using artificial intelligence, some teachers and administrators feel strongly that it’s the future.', 'At Princeton High, a group of about 14 students met during school hours for months to build out Che’w’s conversational capabilities, drawn from artificial intelligence neural networks that are trained to recognize patterns, solve problems and understand words, sentences and phrases from spoken and written language.', 'Che’w, which translates to “star” in Mam, was trained to understand the language by the students so it can serve as a personal tutor.', 'The robot is also trained to speak Spanish and English.', '“It doesn’t lose patience or get sick of talking to them,” said Mark Eastburn, Princeton High School’s science, research and engineering teacher. “', 'It’s taking [AI] off the screen and putting it onto a physical structure that looks like a friend that can help you do whatever you need to do.”', 'In April, the students were one of the top three National Winners at the Samsung Solve For Tomorrow’s competition.', 'AI is now a part of students’ lives, Eastburn said.', '“And it will be there when they’re in college and also in their careers,” he added, “so they might as well learn and use it in appropriate ways in high school, if not even earlier.”']",0.2301947966168704,"The school, which was theColorado State Winner in Samsung’s annual Solve for Tomorrow competition, said it is partnering with the University of Colorado in Boulder this summer to help boost its success rate.","“It doesn’t lose patience or get sick of talking to them,” said Mark Eastburn, Princeton High School’s science, research and engineering teacher. “",0.5956538140773773,Samsung told CNN there was a “definite uptick in” submitted AI-powered innovations this year compared to previous years.,"When ChatGPT launched in November 2022, teachers worried that the tool, which can generate convincing responses and essays in response to user prompts, could make it easier for students to cheat on assignments.",2024-05-19 FTC investigating TikTok over privacy and security,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/tech/ftc-tiktok-probe-privacy-and-security/index.html," Updated 8:11 PM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","The Federal Trade Commission is investigating TikTok for its data and security practices, two sources told CNN on the condition of anonymity. The probe is yet another complication for the social media platform, which is already facing the threat of a potential US ban or a forced divestment from its Chinese parent company. The sources said that the FTC is probing TikTok over an alleged violation of the Children’s Online Privacy Protection rule, which requires companies to notify parents and obtain consent before collecting data from children under 13. The agency is also investigating whether TikTok violated a portion of the FTC Act that prohibits “unfair or deceptive” business practices, the sources said, in denying that TikTok user data could be accessed by individuals in China. The FTC could bring a suit against TikTok or settle with the company in the coming weeks, according to one of the sources. Politico reported news of the probe earlier. When asked about the investigation, FTC Director of Public Affairs Douglas Farrar replied: “No comment.” TikTok did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The FTC probe comes as TikTok faces an existential threat in the US. Earlier this month, a bipartisan group in the US House of Representatives voted to pass a law forcing TikTok to be sold by ByteDance or face a ban from US app stores. The bill is now before the Senate, and President Joe Biden has said he would sign it if it gets to his desk. Senate leaders, however, have indicated they are taking a deliberate approach — which could lead to delays or even potentially doom the House bill. The short-form video company, owned by Chinese firm ByteDance, has denied assertions that its app poses a national security threat to US citizens. TikTok, which does not operate in China, has said that the Chinese government has never accessed US user data. Cybersecurity experts say Chinese laws require ByteDance to cooperate with that country’s intelligence demands — a fact that, given ByteDance’s ownership of TikTok, could hypothetically put US user data at risk. To address that issue, TikTok has taken steps to store its US user data on cloud servers controlled by US tech giant Oracle and established internal protocols limiting access by non-US employees. TikTok acknowledged to Congress in 2022 that employees based in China could access US user data, following a report that year by BuzzFeed News that ByteDance employees had accessed that information on multiple occasions. TikTok CEO Shou Chew, in his first appearance before Congress last year, also acknowledged that several ByteDance employees were fired for spying on certain US journalists as part of a “misguided attempt” to hunt down leakers within the company.",CNN,26/03/2024,"['The Federal Trade Commission is investigating TikTok for its data and security practices, two sources told CNN on the condition of anonymity.', 'The probe is yet another complication for the social media platform, which is already facing the threat of a potential US ban or a forced divestment from its Chinese parent company.', 'The sources said that the FTC is probing TikTok over an alleged violation of the Children’s Online Privacy Protection rule, which requires companies to notify parents and obtain consent before collecting data from children under 13.', 'The agency is also investigating whether TikTok violated a portion of the FTC Act that prohibits “unfair or deceptive” business practices, the sources said, in denying that TikTok user data could be accessed by individuals in China.', 'The FTC could bring a suit against TikTok or settle with the company in the coming weeks, according to one of the sources.', 'Politico reported news of the probe earlier.', 'When asked about the investigation, FTC Director of Public Affairs Douglas Farrar replied: “No comment.”', 'TikTok did not immediately respond to a request for comment.', 'The FTC probe comes as TikTok faces an existential threat in the US.', 'Earlier this month, a bipartisan group in the US House of Representatives voted to pass a law forcing TikTok to be sold by ByteDance or face a ban from US app stores.', 'The bill is now before the Senate, and President Joe Biden has said he would sign it if it gets to his desk.', 'Senate leaders, however, have indicated they are taking a deliberate approach —which could lead to delays or even potentially doom the House bill.', 'The short-form video company, owned by Chinese firm ByteDance, has denied assertions that its app poses a national security threat to US citizens.', 'TikTok, which does not operate in China, has said that the Chinese government has never accessed US user data.', 'Cybersecurity experts say Chinese laws require ByteDance to cooperate with that country’s intelligence demands—a fact that, given ByteDance’s ownership of TikTok, could hypothetically put US user data at risk.', 'To address that issue, TikTok has taken steps to store its US user data on cloud servers controlled by US tech giant Oracle and established internal protocols limiting access by non-US employees.', 'TikTok acknowledged to Congress in 2022 that employees based in China could access US user data, following a report that year by BuzzFeed News that ByteDance employees had accessed that information on multiple occasions.', 'TikTok CEO Shou Chew, in his first appearance before Congress last year, also acknowledged that several ByteDance employees were fired for spying on certain US journalists as part of a “misguided attempt” to hunt down leakers within the company.']",-0.232320081688102,"The Federal Trade Commission is investigating TikTok for its data and security practices, two sources told CNN on the condition of anonymity.","The probe is yet another complication for the social media platform, which is already facing the threat of a potential US ban or a forced divestment from its Chinese parent company.",-0.8880722284317016,,"Senate leaders, however, have indicated they are taking a deliberate approach —which could lead to delays or even potentially doom the House bill.",2024-05-19 China property crisis: Government takes action to tackle slump,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c51nyglznm6o,2024-05-17T07:41:33.670Z,"Chinese authorities have unveiled their most significant steps yet to address the crisis that has been dragging on the country's property sector in recent years. The new measures include cutting the amount home buyers need for a deposit and encouraging local authorities to purchase unsold properties. Problems in China's property market are having a major impact on the world's second largest economy as the industry had been a key driver of growth until recently. The People's Bank of China (PBOC) said it would set up a 300bn yuan ($41.5bn; £32.8bn) facility to support affordable housing. The money would be aimed to support local state-owned enterprises to buy unsold homes, said Tao Ling, a deputy governor at the central bank at a news briefing. Earlier, Vice Premier He Lifeng told officials that local governments can buy properties at ""reasonable prices"" and sell them as affordable housing, according to state-run Xinhua News Agency. Mr He did not offer details of the number of properties that could be purchased or over what timescale the initiative would run. The country's central bank also effectively scrapped the minimum mortgage rate and cut the minimum down payment for first-home buyers from 20% to 15%. The minimum deposit for second homes was lowered to 25% from 30%. Figures released earlier on Friday showed new home prices had fallen for a tenth month in a row in April. The 0.6% month-on-month decline was the sharpest drop since November 2014. Separately on Friday, struggling Chinese developer Country Garden had a hearing in a Hong Kong court over its potential liquidation adjourned to 11 June. China's property developers have been facing a major financial squeeze since 2021, when authorities introduced measures to curb the amount big real estate companies could borrow. Since then several large property developers have defaulted on their debts. In January, Evergrande - which is the world's most indebted property developer - was ordered to be liquidated by a court in Hong Kong. ",BBC,17/05/2024,"[""Chinese authorities have unveiled their most significant steps yet to address the crisis that has been dragging on the country's property sector in recent years."", 'The new measures include cutting the amount home buyers need for a deposit and encouraging local authorities to purchase unsold properties.', ""Problems in China's property market are having a major impact on the world's second largest economy as the industry had been a key driver of growth until recently."", ""The People's Bank of China (PBOC) said it would set up a 300bn yuan ($41.5bn; £32.8bn) facility to support affordable housing."", 'The money would be aimed to support local state-owned enterprises to buy unsold homes, said Tao Ling, a deputy governor at the central bank at a news briefing.', 'Earlier, Vice Premier He Lifeng told officials that local governments can buy properties at ""reasonable prices"" and sell them as affordable housing, according to state-run Xinhua News Agency.', 'Mr He did not offer details of the number of properties that could be purchased or over what timescale the initiative would run.', ""The country's central bank also effectively scrapped the minimum mortgage rate and cut the minimum down payment for first-home buyers from 20% to 15%."", 'The minimum deposit for second homes was lowered to 25% from 30%.', 'Figures released earlier on Friday showed new home prices had fallen for a tenth month in a row in April.', 'The 0.6% month-on-month decline was the sharpest drop since November 2014.', 'Separately on Friday, struggling Chinese developer Country Garden had a hearing in a Hong Kong court over its potential liquidation adjourned to 11 June.', ""China's property developers have been facing a major financial squeeze since 2021, when authorities introduced measures to curb the amount big real estate companies could borrow."", 'Since then several large property developers have defaulted on their debts.', ""In January, Evergrande - which is the world's most indebted property developer - was ordered to be liquidated by a court in Hong Kong.""]",-0.0097321247992762,The new measures include cutting the amount home buyers need for a deposit and encouraging local authorities to purchase unsold properties.,Chinese authorities have unveiled their most significant steps yet to address the crisis that has been dragging on the country's property sector in recent years.,-0.937471457890102,,The 0.6% month-on-month decline was the sharpest drop since November 2014.,2024-05-19 The Trump hush money trial is thrusting reporters into an uncomfortable spotlight,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/media/trump-hush-money-trial-reporters-spotlight/index.html," Updated 7:14 AM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","Editor’s Note: A version of this article first appeared in the “Reliable Sources” newsletter. Sign up for the daily digest chronicling the evolving media landscape here. The Donald Trump hush money trial is dragging reporters into uncomfortable territory and laying bare the complicated relationships journalists often have with sources. Michael Cohen, who continued to testify Thursday, invoked from the stand the names of several high-profile media figures, putting their relationships with the former Trump fixer in the spotlight. Cohen named The New York Times’ Maggie Haberman and MSNBC’s Katy Tur as reporters which he had established relationships with. He alleged without evidence that ABC News’ John Santucci had tried to pay for the rights to Stormy Daniels’ story. And he spoke about having recorded dozens of phone calls with media figures, including former CNN boss Jeff Zucker. To be clear, a reporter having working relationships with sources is not unethical — it’s often a hallmark of being a strong journalist and it does not translate into taking orders or publishing unvetted information. Reputable news outlets like ABC News do not pay for interviews, but trying to secure a sit-down with a high-profile subject is anything but uncommon. And speaking on the phone with a source while the person on the other end of the line secretly records says a lot more about that individual than the journalist. For now, much of what has been described by Cohen in court appears to be routine, run-of-the-mill behavior that occurs each and every day in journalism. But the general public does not work in a newsroom, and regular interactions with sources can be framed in such a way that removes key context and portrays a routine reporting process as nefarious. That context is crucial. For example, Haberman has indisputably been one of the most authoritative reporters on Trump. For years, her byline has dogged the Queens-born developer-turned-politician, exposing corruption, revealing embarrassing secrets, and shedding light on his authoritarian impulses. In return, Trump has ranted and raged at her endlessly. The notion that Haberman is a commissioned stenographer for Trump is preposterous. But for Haberman — or any reporter — to get information from Trump-world requires cultivating thorny relationships with sources, many of whom are slimy figures. It is neither unusual nor unethical for journalists to be cordial to the sources whom they get information from. That does not mean they print whatever these sources send them or function as their mouthpieces. It simply means that they have established a relationship that is conducive to the flow and exchange of information. And when the journalist deems that information to be newsworthy, they might then be able to publish it for the world to see. It’s also worth noting that many of the top journalists covering Trump world have complex histories with the key figures in the case. A witness like Cohen or an attorney like Todd Blanche might be motivated to cast various journalists in unflattering light. In many ways, the Trump hush money trial has become something of a Rorschach test. People see what they want to see, ignoring evidence before their eyes that runs counter to their chosen narrative. And for the faction of the public that believes some members of the press are too cozy with Trump world, seeing Cohen discuss his relationships with the news media has only reinforced their views. That reporters are playing a starring role in the trial is also a function of the Trump years. The former president, seeking to use the news media as a foil, cast the journalists covering him as characters in his unrelenting show. Through vile attacks, he moved the reporters from behind the scenes onto the front lines. And so now, amid his criminal trial, it is fitting that members of the press are once again finding themselves in the awkward position of being part of the very story they are covering.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['Editor’s Note: A version of this article first appeared in the “Reliable Sources” newsletter.', 'Sign up for the daily digest chronicling the evolving media landscape here.', 'TheDonald Trumphush money trial is dragging reporters into uncomfortable territory and laying bare the complicated relationships journalists often have with sources.', 'Michael Cohen, who continued to testify Thursday, invoked from the stand the names of several high-profile media figures, putting their relationships with the former Trump fixer in the spotlight.', 'Cohen namedThe New York Times’ Maggie HabermanandMSNBC’s Katy Turas reporters which he had established relationships with.', 'He alleged without evidence thatABC News’ John Santuccihad tried to pay for the rights toStormy Daniels’ story.', 'And he spoke about having recorded dozens of phone calls with media figures, including formerCNNbossJeff Zucker.', 'To be clear, a reporter having working relationships with sources is not unethical — it’s often a hallmark of being a strong journalist and it does not translate into taking orders or publishing unvetted information.', 'Reputable news outlets like ABC News do not pay for interviews, but trying to secure a sit-down with a high-profile subject is anything but uncommon.', 'And speaking on the phone with a source while the person on the other end of the line secretly records says a lot more about that individual than the journalist.', 'For now, much of what has been described by Cohen in court appears to be routine, run-of-the-mill behavior that occurs each and every day in journalism.', 'But the general public does not work in a newsroom, and regular interactions with sources can be framed in such a way that removes key context and portrays a routine reporting process as nefarious.', 'That context is crucial.', 'For example, Haberman has indisputably been one of the most authoritative reporters on Trump.', 'For years, her byline has dogged the Queens-born developer-turned-politician, exposing corruption, revealing embarrassing secrets, and shedding light on his authoritarian impulses.', 'In return, Trump has ranted and raged at her endlessly.', 'The notion that Haberman is a commissioned stenographer for Trump is preposterous.', 'But for Haberman —or any reporter— to get information from Trump-world requires cultivating thorny relationships with sources, many of whom are slimy figures.', 'It is neither unusual nor unethical for journalists to be cordial to the sources whom they get information from.', 'That does not mean they print whatever these sources send them or function as their mouthpieces.', 'It simply means that they have established a relationship that is conducive to the flow and exchange of information.', 'And when the journalist deems that information to be newsworthy, they might then be able to publish it for the world to see.', 'It’s also worth noting that many of the top journalists covering Trump world have complex histories with the key figures in the case.', 'A witness like Cohen or an attorney likeTodd Blanchemight be motivated to cast various journalists in unflattering light.', 'In many ways, the Trump hush money trial has become something of a Rorschach test.', 'People see what they want to see, ignoring evidence before their eyes that runs counter to their chosen narrative.', 'And for the faction of the public that believes some members of the press are too cozy with Trump world, seeing Cohen discuss his relationships with the news media has only reinforced their views.', 'That reporters are playing a starring role in the trial is also a function of the Trump years.', 'The former president, seeking to use the news media as a foil, cast the journalists covering him as characters in his unrelenting show.', 'Through vile attacks, he moved the reporters from behind the scenes onto the front lines.', 'And so now, amid his criminal trial, it is fitting that members of the press are once again finding themselves in the awkward position of being part of the very story they are covering.']",-0.0173682635319755,"To be clear, a reporter having working relationships with sources is not unethical — it’s often a hallmark of being a strong journalist and it does not translate into taking orders or publishing unvetted information.","Through vile attacks, he moved the reporters from behind the scenes onto the front lines.",0.0812542289495468,It simply means that they have established a relationship that is conducive to the flow and exchange of information.,"And so now, amid his criminal trial, it is fitting that members of the press are once again finding themselves in the awkward position of being part of the very story they are covering.",2024-05-19 Post Office Horizon IT scandal: Alan Bates rejects second offer,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cjr74ezvpq0o,2024-05-17T10:31:43.785Z,"Former sub-postmaster and campaigner Alan Bates has rejected his second offer of compensation for the Post Office Horizon IT scandal. His first offer in January, which he described as ""cruel"" and ""derisory"", was about a sixth of what he had claimed. The latest offer amounted to around a third of what he requested, with Mr Bates telling the BBC ""it's frustrating for myself, frustrating for everyone."" Separately, the inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal heard that Jane MacLeod, the Post Office's former general counsel, ""won't co-operate"", according to a lawyer for the inquiry. Jason Beer KC said that the inquiry would not be hearing from Ms MacLeod as planned because ""she lives abroad and won't co-operate"". Ms MacLeod was the top internal lawyer at the Post Office at the time of the Alan Bates vs Post Office Ltd court case. The BBC has tried to contact Ms MacLeod for comment. Alan Bates' fight for justice inspired ITV’s Mr Bates vs The Post Office drama. Between 1999 and 2015, more than 900 sub-postmasters were wrongly prosecuted after faulty software indicated that money was missing from Post Office branch accounts. Mr Bates leads the Justice for Subpostmasters Alliance, campaigning for financial address for the hundreds of victims who took part in the group legal action against the Post Office. Their compensation was swallowed up by the huge legal costs in bringing their case. The government went on to set up a specific compensation fund to give these sub-postmasters the same financial redress as everyone else. But progress has been slow. Mr Bates is warning he will have to ""look at other ways to progress the redress"" if the Department of Business and Trade does not sort things out. He also highlighted the most recent Post Office Horizon compensation data. As of 24 April 2024, 146 offers have been accepted and 138 of these have accepted offers of the £75,000 fixed payment. Mr Bates says the vast majority of the bigger and most complex cases, some 300 of them, have still to be sorted. ""It's just not working quickly enough. People have lost 20 years of their lives and they're still hanging on... we've also lost 70 odd people along the way."" ""These delays are causing all sorts of problems for the families involved."" On Friday, the Post Office inquiry was told by its former finance director that the company maintained an “unacceptable relationship” with postmasters. Alisdair Cameron said the relationship with the postmasters was “self-serving” and based on an imbalance of power. He said he thought it was established now that the original prosecutions of subpostmasters were “a deliberate miscarriage of justice."" Mr Cameron said senior management should have settled the claims, apologised and moved on years ago. He said the Post Office had been over-reliant on its flawed Horizon IT system “when we knew its weaknesses”. “We have defended ourselves to avoid the consequences. A waste of public money and a postponement of justice.” Mr Cameron, who joined the Post Office in 2015 and worked closely with then chief executive Paula Vennells, sat on the sub-committee of the Post Office board that oversaw its defence to the group litigation in 2018-19 led by Alan Bates. At the start of his session, he gave an apology: “I am sorry that when I joined the Post Office in 2015, I accepted without challenging the evidence that there had been no miscarriages of justice in the earlier prosecutions which caused so much devastation to postmasters and their families. “As a member of the GLO [group litigation order] sub-committee, I am sorry I did not push against the lack of challenge and testing of Post Office’s legal case. Had I done better in these things, we might have started the process of getting justice for postmasters earlier. “I hope that my statement and evidence today assists the inquiry in its investigations and in getting to the truth which is the least that those affected deserve.” Mr Cameron was asked about a ‘Strictly Confidential’ document titled “What went wrong?”, written by him in November 2020, which set out the criticisms faced by the Post Office after it lost the litigation brought by 555 subpostmasters. In it he said that at the heart of what went wrong, the “original sin” of the Post Office was “our culture, self-absorbed and defensive”, which “stopped us from dealing with Postmasters in a straightforward and acceptable way.” The document revealed his estimate of the total cost to the Post Office of the scandal at the time was £1-£1.5bn. ",BBC,17/05/2024,"['Former sub-postmaster and campaigner Alan Bates has rejected his second offer of compensation for the Post Office Horizon IT scandal.', 'His first offer in January, which he described as ""cruel"" and ""derisory"", was about a sixth of what he had claimed.', 'The latest offer amounted to around a third of what he requested, with Mr Bates telling the BBC ""it\'s frustrating for myself, frustrating for everyone.""', 'Separately, the inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal heard that Jane MacLeod, the Post Office\'s former general counsel, ""won\'t co-operate"", according to a lawyer for the inquiry.', 'Jason Beer KC said that the inquiry would not be hearing from Ms MacLeod as planned because ""she lives abroad and won\'t co-operate"".', 'Ms MacLeod was the top internal lawyer at the Post Office at the time of the Alan Bates vs Post Office Ltd court case.', 'The BBC has tried to contact Ms MacLeod for comment.', ""Alan Bates' fight for justice inspired ITV’s Mr Bates vs The Post Office drama."", 'Between 1999 and 2015, more than 900 sub-postmasters were wrongly prosecuted after faulty software indicated that money was missing from Post Office branch accounts.', 'Mr Bates leads the Justice for Subpostmasters Alliance, campaigning for financial address for the hundreds of victims who took part in the group legal action against the Post Office.', 'Their compensation was swallowed up by the huge legal costs in bringing their case.', 'The government went on to set up a specific compensation fund to give these sub-postmasters the same financial redress as everyone else.', 'But progress has been slow.', 'Mr Bates is warning he will have to ""look at other ways to progress the redress"" if the Department of Business and Trade does not sort things out.', 'He also highlighted the most recent Post Office Horizon compensation data.', 'As of 24 April 2024, 146 offers have been accepted and 138 of these have accepted offers of the £75,000 fixed payment.', 'Mr Bates says the vast majority of the bigger and most complex cases, some 300 of them, have still to be sorted. ""', ""It's just not working quickly enough."", 'People have lost 20 years of their lives and they\'re still hanging on... we\'ve also lost 70 odd people along the way."" ""', 'These delays are causing all sorts of problems for the families involved.""', 'On Friday, the Post Office inquiry was told by its former finance director that the company maintained an “unacceptable relationship” with postmasters.', 'Alisdair Cameron said the relationship with the postmasters was “self-serving” and based on an imbalance of power.', 'He said he thought it was established now that the original prosecutions of subpostmasters were “a deliberate miscarriage of justice.""', 'Mr Cameron said senior management should have settled the claims, apologised and moved on years ago.', 'He said the Post Office had been over-reliant on its flawed Horizon IT system “when we knew its weaknesses”. “', 'We have defended ourselves to avoid the consequences.', 'A waste of public money and a postponement of justice.”', 'Mr Cameron, who joined the Post Office in 2015 and worked closely with then chief executive Paula Vennells, sat on the sub-committee of the Post Office board that oversaw its defence to the group litigation in 2018-19 led by Alan Bates.', 'At the start of his session, he gave an apology: “I am sorry that when I joined the Post Office in 2015, I accepted without challenging the evidence that there had been no miscarriages of justice in the earlier prosecutions which caused so much devastation to postmasters and their families. “', 'As a member of the GLO [group litigation order] sub-committee, I am sorry I did not push against the lack of challenge and testing of Post Office’s legal case.', 'Had I done better in these things, we might have started the process of getting justice for postmasters earlier. “', 'I hope that my statement and evidence today assists the inquiry in its investigations and in getting to the truth which is the least that those affected deserve.”', 'Mr Cameron was asked about a ‘Strictly Confidential’ document titled “What went wrong?”,', 'written by him in November 2020, which set out the criticisms faced by the Post Office after it lost the litigation brought by 555 subpostmasters.', 'In it he said that at the heart of what went wrong, the “original sin” of the Post Office was “our culture, self-absorbed and defensive”, which “stopped us from dealing with Postmasters in a straightforward and acceptable way.”', 'The document revealed his estimate of the total cost to the Post Office of the scandal at the time was £1-£1.5bn.']",-0.0928547602815271,"Had I done better in these things, we might have started the process of getting justice for postmasters earlier. “",Former sub-postmaster and campaigner Alan Bates has rejected his second offer of compensation for the Post Office Horizon IT scandal.,-0.6515941619873047,"Had I done better in these things, we might have started the process of getting justice for postmasters earlier. “",But progress has been slow.,2024-05-19 Sir Paul McCartney first UK billionaire musician,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cq5n553p184o,2024-05-17T07:04:09.203Z,"Sir Paul McCartney has become the first UK musician to become a billionaire, according to the Sunday Times Rich List. The former Beatle, 81, boosted his wealth by £50m in the past year with touring, the lucrative value of his back catalogue and Beyoncé's cover of the classic track he wrote in 1968, Blackbird, helping him achieve the status. Gopi Hinduja and his family were crowned the richest people in the UK again, with their wealth hitting £37.2bn, the largest fortune ever recorded by the newspaper. Sir Elton John, Lord Lloyd-Webber and David and Victoria Beckham were among some of the well-known names on the list, which has minimum wealth entry of £350m. This year’s list of 350 individuals and families together held a combined wealth of £795.3bn, which the Sunday Times said was a larger sum than Poland's economy. But Robert Watts, compiler of the Sunday Times Rich List, said this year's list suggested that ""Britain’s billionaire boom has come to an end"". ""Many of our home-grown entrepreneurs have seen their fortunes fall and some of the global super rich who came here are moving away,"" he added. Mr Watts said that ""thousands of British livelihoods rely on the super-rich to some extent"". ""We’ll have to wait and see whether we have now reached peak billionaire, and what that means for our economy,"" he added. Similar to last year, several well-known names faced ""significant financial setbacks"", the newspaper said. Due to a difficult year for Virgin Money and space tourism company Galactic, Sir Richard Branson's wealth fell to £2.4bn - the level it was in 2000. But Sir Jim Ratcliffe, who bought a 27.7% stake in Manchester United for about £1.25bn in February, suffered ""considerable losses"" and was among the biggest fallers on 2024's list. But the Sunday Times said his £6.16bn decline in wealth was largely due to a substantial fall in profits at chemicals giant Ineos Group. Inventor Sir James Dyson and family, and Andy Currie, who has been a director of Ineos since 1999 also those who saw their wealth drop the most. But Sir Jim and Sir James remain in the top five richest in the UK. This year's new entries included Graham King, who the Sunday Times said had amassed a £750 million fortune from holiday parks, inheritance and housing asylum seekers for the government. Jon and Susie Seaton, a couple who founded education publisher Twinkl at their kitchen table in Sheffield and sold a stake valuing the business at £500m also made the list alongside Euan Blair, Sir Tony Blair's eldest son, who set up £1.4bn apprenticeship tech firm Multiverse. Sir Lewis Hamilton, the Formula 1 driver who is set to move from Mercedes to Ferrari for the 2025 season, was also a newcomer. “These may be harder times to create wealth, but The Sunday Times Rich List continues to unearth entrepreneurs building fortunes in diverse and often surprising ways,"" Mr Watts said. ""This year’s new entries include people who have made money from artificial intelligence and virtual worlds as well as plumbing supplies and teaching aids."" ",BBC,17/05/2024,"['Sir Paul McCartney has become the first UK musician to become a billionaire, according to the Sunday Times Rich List.', ""The former Beatle, 81, boosted his wealth by £50m in the past year with touring, the lucrative value of his back catalogue and Beyoncé's cover of the classic track he wrote in 1968, Blackbird, helping him achieve the status."", 'Gopi Hinduja and his family were crowned the richest people in the UK again, with their wealth hitting £37.2bn, the largest fortune ever recorded by the newspaper.', ""Sir Elton John, Lord Lloyd-Webber and David and Victoria Beckham were among some of the well-known names on the list, which has minimum wealth entry of £350m. This year’s list of 350 individuals and families together held a combined wealth of £795.3bn, which the Sunday Times said was a larger sum than Poland's economy."", 'But Robert Watts, compiler of the Sunday Times Rich List, said this year\'s list suggested that ""Britain’s billionaire boom has come to an end"". ""', 'Many of our home-grown entrepreneurs have seen their fortunes fall and some of the global super rich who came here are moving away,"" he added.', 'Mr Watts said that ""thousands of British livelihoods rely on the super-rich to some extent"". ""', 'We’ll have to wait and see whether we have now reached peak billionaire, and what that means for our economy,"" he added.', 'Similar to last year, several well-known names faced ""significant financial setbacks"", the newspaper said.', ""Due to a difficult year for Virgin Money and space tourism company Galactic, Sir Richard Branson's wealth fell to £2.4bn - the level it was in 2000."", 'But Sir Jim Ratcliffe, who bought a 27.7% stake in Manchester United for about £1.25bn in February, suffered ""considerable losses"" and was among the biggest fallers on 2024\'s list.', 'But the Sunday Times said his £6.16bn decline in wealth was largely due to a substantial fall in profits at chemicals giant Ineos Group.', 'Inventor Sir James Dyson and family, and Andy Currie, who has been a director of Ineos since 1999 also those who saw their wealth drop the most.', 'But Sir Jim and Sir James remain in the top five richest in the UK.', ""This year's new entries included Graham King, who the Sunday Times said had amassed a £750 million fortune from holiday parks, inheritance and housing asylum seekers for the government."", ""Jon and Susie Seaton, a couple who founded education publisher Twinkl at their kitchen table in Sheffield and sold a stake valuing the business at £500m also made the list alongside Euan Blair, Sir Tony Blair's eldest son, who set up £1.4bn apprenticeship tech firm Multiverse."", 'Sir Lewis Hamilton, the Formula 1 driver who is set to move from Mercedes to Ferrari for the 2025 season, was also a newcomer. “', 'These may be harder times to create wealth, but The Sunday Times Rich List continues to unearth entrepreneurs building fortunes in diverse and often surprising ways,"" Mr Watts said. ""', 'This year’s new entries include people who have made money from artificial intelligence and virtual worlds as well as plumbing supplies and teaching aids.""']",0.5058687948692683,But the Sunday Times said his £6.16bn decline in wealth was largely due to a substantial fall in profits at chemicals giant Ineos Group.,"But Sir Jim Ratcliffe, who bought a 27.7% stake in Manchester United for about £1.25bn in February, suffered ""considerable losses"" and was among the biggest fallers on 2024's list.",-0.1425417228178544,"The former Beatle, 81, boosted his wealth by £50m in the past year with touring, the lucrative value of his back catalogue and Beyoncé's cover of the classic track he wrote in 1968, Blackbird, helping him achieve the status.","Due to a difficult year for Virgin Money and space tourism company Galactic, Sir Richard Branson's wealth fell to £2.4bn - the level it was in 2000.",2024-05-19 More people are turning 65 this year than ever before. That has sparked a gold rush for the retirement industry,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/18/business/retirement-plan-insurance-annuities/index.html," Published 2:00 PM EDT, Sat May 18, 2024 ","More Americans are turning 65 this year than ever before, and that number is set to creep even higher over the next few years. It’s fueling a huge rollout of new retirement products — but they’re not all golden tickets. An average of 11,200 Americans will reach that traditional retirement age each day in 2024, according to a recent report by the Alliance for Lifetime Income. This surge, along with new legislation that took effect recently, has led to a growing number of financial products that promise paychecks for life, no matter how long you live. But some options are difficult to reverse and, since some plans are so new, the benefits and shortfalls have not been thoroughly researched. Although she plans to stop working in about a decade, Jennifer Messina, a 51-year-old administrative assistant in Nutley, New Jersey, said she isn’t worried about retirement because her husband’s job affords them a union-sponsored annuity (an insurance product that pays out income) and a pension plan. With defined benefit pensions, the burden of saving and investing for retirement falls on the employer, not on employees. These plans generally offer employees payments for life, depending on that person’s salary and how long they were with the company. “I’m really fortunate,” Messina said. “We didn’t really save much of anything.” However, jobs offering pension plans are harder to come by compared to previous decades. Over the past 40 years, defined contribution plans, also known as 401(k) plans, have taken their place. Americans currently hold over $7 trillion in 401(k) plans, according to data from the Investment Company Institute, a trade association. These types of retirement plans put the job of saving and investing on the employee. With 401(k) plans, it’s up to retirees to ensure they don’t run out of money. Many people aren’t able to save adequately for retirement so that potentially leaves them heavily reliant on the Social Security benefits they accrued in their working years – and those benefits aren’t huge. The average retiree’s monthly check this year is $1,915, according to the Social Security Administration. And even retirees with the highest earnings during their careers are getting somewhere between $2,710 and $4,873 depending on the age they are when they retire. In addition, millions of employees don’t have access to a workplace savings plan or don’t participate if they do. Nearly 50% of people don’t have any money saved in a retirement account, according to Federal Reserve data from 2022. “It is structurally flawed,” Teresa Ghilarducci, a labor economist and professor at The New School for Social Research, said of the 401(k) system. However, this year has brought some changes to employer-sponsored plans. A new law, known as Secure Act 2.0, allows companies to now offer their employees access to lifetime annuity products in their 401(k)s. Enter financial companies offering new investments that echo the promise of a traditional pension: a paycheck you can count on for life. In April, BlackRock unveiled a new fund offering called LifePath Paycheck, which is a target-date retirement fund, which invests in less risky assets the closer you get to retirement. The new twist: It comes with an option to purchase annuities recommended by BlackRock. People who are in BlackRock’s target date fund and elect to purchase an annuity through their workplace plan are not subject to the typical sales commission fees usually associated with buying an annuity. But they can only be in the fund if they have a managed account within their 401(k) plan and pay a management fee based on their assets. Nationwide is also offering a new target-date fund with an annuity option for 401(k) participants called Income America 5ForLife, although it’s structured differently from BlackRock’s product. By being in the fund you automatically will get annuity payments in retirement and those payments will be based on 5% of your balance when you retire. The product promises to continue paying that amount, even if you outlive the account’s balance. Unlike a traditional annuity, you can pull your money out of the plan without penalty if you no longer wish to receive annuity payments. “This is a whole new burgeoning segment,” Eric Stevenson, Nationwide’s president of retirement solutions, told CNN. “This isn’t your father’s annuity.” Both products can be used with tax-deferred 401k savings or after-tax Roth 401(k) savings. For now, they are only available to employees at companies that offer them and only if they have managed accounts within the workplace savings plan. Ghilarducci cautioned that these products won’t be free. And she advised that, when possible, retirees should opt to manage their savings on their own. “Then you’re not subject to any fees and you’re not paying somebody else’s profits,” she said. But for retirees looking for a guarantee that they won’t run out of money, some of these new offerings may be appealing. There may be other downsides, however: As with other annuities, the monthly paychecks you get may be smaller if you elect to pass the benefit on to your spouse after you pass away, and annuities generally don’t allow payments to pass on to children without incurring an additional cost. And annuities can be confusing to navigate — and with many it is difficult to remove your money after you’re locked in. There’s also the issue of inflation. Annuities do not necessarily offer inflation-adjusted payments, which means the value of your guaranteed paycheck will decline over time as you get older. In other words, it’s always buyer beware. A steady paycheck, even one that emulates a traditional pension, might not be a perfect solution. Though she said she’s not worried about her finances after retiring, Messina, the administrative assistant in New Jersey, conceded that she and her husband will likely have to downsize, even with the benefits of a pension and annuity. “Even with the amount of money we’ll be getting, we can’t stay here in New Jersey,” she said. Their next hurdle is deciding where to settle before they retire. Messina wants to relocate to South Carolina, while her husband wants to move to North Dakota.",CNN,18/05/2024,"['More Americans are turning 65 this year than ever before, and that number is set to creep even higher over the next few years.', 'It’s fueling a huge rollout of new retirement products — but they’re not all golden tickets.', 'An average of 11,200 Americans will reach that traditional retirement age each day in 2024, according to a recent report by the Alliance for Lifetime Income.', 'This surge, along with new legislation that took effect recently, has led to a growing number of financial products that promise paychecks for life, no matter how long you live.', 'But some options are difficult to reverse and, since some plans are so new, the benefits and shortfalls have not been thoroughly researched.', 'Although she plans to stop working in about a decade, Jennifer Messina, a 51-year-old administrative assistant in Nutley, New Jersey, said she isn’t worried about retirement because her husband’s job affords them a union-sponsored annuity (an insurance product that pays out income) and a pension plan.', 'With defined benefit pensions, the burden of saving and investing for retirement falls on the employer, not on employees.', 'These plans generally offer employees payments for life, depending on that person’s salary and how long they were with the company.', '“I’m really fortunate,” Messina said. “', 'We didn’t really save much of anything.”', 'However, jobs offering pension plans are harder to come by compared to previous decades.', 'Over the past 40 years, defined contribution plans, also known as 401(k) plans, have taken their place.', 'Americans currently hold over $7 trillion in 401(k) plans, according to data from the Investment Company Institute, a trade association.', 'These types of retirement plans put the job of saving and investing on the employee.', 'With 401(k) plans, it’s up to retirees to ensure they don’t run out of money.', 'Many people aren’t able to save adequately for retirement so that potentially leaves them heavily reliant on the Social Security benefits they accrued in their working years – and those benefits aren’t huge.', 'The average retiree’s monthly check this year is $1,915, according to the Social Security Administration.', 'And even retirees with the highest earnings during their careers are getting somewhere between $2,710 and $4,873 depending on the age they are when they retire.', 'In addition, millions of employees don’t have access to a workplace savings plan or don’t participate if they do.', 'Nearly 50% of people don’t have any money saved in a retirement account, according to Federal Reserve data from 2022.', '“It is structurally flawed,” Teresa Ghilarducci, a labor economist and professor at The New School for Social Research, said of the 401(k) system.', 'However, this year has brought some changes to employer-sponsored plans.', 'A new law, known as Secure Act 2.0, allows companies to now offer their employees access to lifetime annuity products in their 401(k)s.', 'Enter financial companies offering new investments that echo the promise of a traditional pension: a paycheck you can count on for life.', 'In April, BlackRock unveiled a new fund offering called LifePath Paycheck, which is a target-date retirement fund, which invests in less risky assets the closer you get to retirement.', 'The new twist: It comes with an option to purchase annuities recommended by BlackRock.', 'People who are in BlackRock’s target date fund and elect to purchase an annuity through their workplace plan are not subject to the typical sales commission fees usually associated with buying an annuity.', 'But they can only be in the fund if they have a managed account within their 401(k) plan and pay a management fee based on their assets.', 'Nationwide is also offering a new target-date fund with an annuity option for 401(k) participants called Income America 5ForLife, although it’s structured differently from BlackRock’s product.', 'By being in the fund you automatically will get annuity payments in retirement and those payments will be based on 5% of your balance when you retire.', 'The product promises to continue paying that amount, even if you outlive the account’s balance.', 'Unlike a traditional annuity, you can pull your money out of the plan without penalty if you no longer wish to receive annuity payments.', '“This is a whole new burgeoning segment,” Eric Stevenson, Nationwide’s president of retirement solutions, told CNN. “', 'This isn’t your father’s annuity.”', 'Both products can be used with tax-deferred 401k savings or after-tax Roth 401(k) savings.', 'For now, they are only available to employees at companies that offer them and only if they have managed accounts within the workplace savings plan.', 'Ghilarducci cautioned that these products won’t be free.', 'And she advised that, when possible, retirees should opt to manage their savings on their own. “', 'Then you’re not subject to any fees and you’re not paying somebody else’s profits,” she said.', 'But for retirees looking for a guarantee that they won’t run out of money, some of these new offerings may be appealing.', 'There may be other downsides, however: As with other annuities, the monthly paychecks you get may be smaller if you elect to pass the benefit on to your spouse after you pass away, and annuities generally don’t allow payments to pass on to children without incurring an additional cost.', 'And annuities can be confusing to navigate — and with many it is difficult to remove your money after you’re locked in.', 'There’s also the issue of inflation.', 'Annuities do not necessarily offer inflation-adjusted payments, which means the value of your guaranteed paycheck will decline over time as you get older.', 'In other words, it’s always buyer beware.', 'A steady paycheck, even one that emulates a traditional pension, might not be a perfect solution.', 'Though she said she’s not worried about her finances after retiring, Messina, the administrative assistant in New Jersey, conceded that she and her husband will likely have to downsize, even with the benefits of a pension and annuity.', '“Even with the amount of money we’ll be getting, we can’t stay here in New Jersey,” she said.', 'Their next hurdle is deciding where to settle before they retire.', 'Messina wants to relocate to South Carolina, while her husband wants to move to North Dakota.']",0.1354248717314824,Many people aren’t able to save adequately for retirement so that potentially leaves them heavily reliant on the Social Security benefits they accrued in their working years – and those benefits aren’t huge.,"Although she plans to stop working in about a decade, Jennifer Messina, a 51-year-old administrative assistant in Nutley, New Jersey, said she isn’t worried about retirement because her husband’s job affords them a union-sponsored annuity (an insurance product that pays out income) and a pension plan.",-0.1577972684587751,"More Americans are turning 65 this year than ever before, and that number is set to creep even higher over the next few years.","However, jobs offering pension plans are harder to come by compared to previous decades.",2024-05-19 Netflix to air NFL games on Christmas Day in major expansion into live sports,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/15/media/netflix-nfl-christmas-games/index.html," Published 10:57 AM EDT, Wed May 15, 2024 ","Netflix has caught its biggest sports deal yet: the NFL. The streaming service announced Wednesday a three-year deal to broadcast the league’s Christmas Day games, marking a major milestone for Netflix, whose sports ambitions have largely focused on producing documentaries and creating live specials about golf and tennis. This deal kicks off this year with Netflix airing globally two NFL games on Christmas. In 2025 and 2026, Netflix will stream “at least one” holiday game. Financial terms of the deal weren’t disclosed. “There are no live annual events, sports or otherwise, that compare with the audiences NFL football attracts. We’re so excited that the NFL’s Christmas Day games will be only on Netflix,” said Bela Bajaria, Netflix’s chief content officer, in a release. This year’s Christmas Day games will be revealed Wednesday night on the NFL Network and website. Anchors and commentators for Netflix’s games were also not immediately revealed. “The NFL on Christmas has become a tradition and to partner with Netflix, a service whose biggest day of the year is typically this holiday, is the perfect combination to grow this event globally for NFL fans,” said Hans Schroeder, NFL’s executive VP of media distribution, in the release. NFL games are typically the highest-rated shows on US TV every week during the season, and adding Netflix to its roster could help the league expand its audience domestically and abroad. The NFL will play five international games in three countries this upcoming season, the league announced. The deal means NFL is also partners with all the major US broadcast networks and most major streaming platforms, including a Thursday night game package with Amazon and Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV.",CNN,15/05/2024,"['Netflix has caught its biggest sports deal yet: the NFL.', 'The streaming service announced Wednesday a three-year deal to broadcast the league’s Christmas Day games, marking a major milestone for Netflix, whose sports ambitions have largely focused on producing documentaries and creating live specials about golf and tennis.', 'This deal kicks off this year with Netflix airing globally two NFL games on Christmas.', 'In 2025 and 2026, Netflix will stream “at least one” holiday game.', 'Financial terms of the deal weren’t disclosed.', '“There are no live annual events, sports or otherwise, that compare with the audiences NFL football attracts.', 'We’re so excited that the NFL’s Christmas Day games will be only on Netflix,” said Bela Bajaria, Netflix’s chief content officer, in a release.', 'This year’s Christmas Day games will be revealed Wednesday night on the NFL Network and website.', 'Anchors and commentators for Netflix’s games were also not immediately revealed.', '“The NFL on Christmas has become a tradition and to partner with Netflix, a service whose biggest day of the year is typically this holiday, is the perfect combination to grow this event globally for NFL fans,” said Hans Schroeder, NFL’s executive VP of media distribution, in the release.', 'NFL games are typically the highest-rated shows on US TV every week during the season, and adding Netflix to its roster could help the league expand its audience domestically and abroad.', 'The NFL will play five international games in three countries this upcoming season, the league announced.', 'The deal means NFL is also partners with all the major US broadcast networks and most major streaming platforms, including a Thursday night game package with Amazon and Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV.']",0.2613221263636374,"“The NFL on Christmas has become a tradition and to partner with Netflix, a service whose biggest day of the year is typically this holiday, is the perfect combination to grow this event globally for NFL fans,” said Hans Schroeder, NFL’s executive VP of media distribution, in the release.",,0.9933791160583496,"The streaming service announced Wednesday a three-year deal to broadcast the league’s Christmas Day games, marking a major milestone for Netflix, whose sports ambitions have largely focused on producing documentaries and creating live specials about golf and tennis.",,2024-05-19 Your ultimate guide to the American Express Membership Rewards program,https://edition.cnn.com/cnn-underscored/travel/american-express-membership-rewards-guide," Updated 1:03 PM EDT, Mon April 1, 2024 ","American Express Membership Rewards® are among the most valuable travel rewards points out there. That’s primarily because they fall into the category of “transferable rewards,” meaning you’re not tied down to a single airline or hotel program with which you can redeem them. In other words, you’re not just earning points that can transfer to Delta SkyMiles, but they can also transfer to any of the other 16 airlines in the Membership Rewards portfolio. Having Membership Rewards points gives you options, and that’s always a good thing. If you’re ready to give your rewards portfolio a boost, here’s everything you need to know about earning and redeeming Amex Membership Rewards. You can earn Membership Rewards points in various ways. Some require little effort, while others involve a heavier lift. It’s a good idea to take advantage of all the options out there in order to maximize your earnings. Here’s a look at how to earn Membership Rewards most efficiently. The primary way to earn Amex points is through credit cards that earn Membership Rewards. Amex has an extensive lineup of personal and business cards offering generous welcome bonuses and recurring benefits to help you earn maximum points. These include well-known cards like The Platinum Card® from American Express and the American Express® Gold Card. With a single welcome bonus offer, you can give a pretty substantial boost to your Membership Rewards points balance. Here’s a look at the current welcome bonus offers on personal credit cards that earn Membership Rewards. Keep in mind, too, that many of these cards carry an annual fee: All information about the Amex EveryDay Credit Card, Amex EveryDay Preferred Credit Card and the American Express Green Card has been collected independently by CNN Underscored. Similarly, American Express offers a suite of business credit cards. All information about the Business Green Rewards Card from American Express has been collected independently by CNN Underscored. Keep in mind that several of these cards also carry an annual fee: Beyond the welcome bonus offers available, American Express makes it easy to earn Membership Rewards through category bonuses. If you spend a lot on groceries, it may be worth considering the Amex Gold card to earn 4 points per dollar spent at US supermarkets (on up to $25,000 in purchases per year). If you travel often, the Amex Platinum card is a great option for earning 5 points per dollar spent on eligible bookings made directly with an airline or with Amex Travel. Plus, you’ll have access to airport lounges, like American Express Centurion Lounges and Delta Sky Clubs, among others. When applying for American Express cards, be sure to take note of the application rules. For example, you can’t earn an Amex welcome bonus more than once (with a few exceptions), and you generally won’t be approved for more than two cards every 90 days. Before applying for a credit card, it’s important to do your research. As mentioned before, American Express makes it manageable to earn bonus points long after the welcome bonus offer. One of those ways is by adding an authorized user to your Amex card, which will occasionally earn you bonus points. Aside from the special promotions where Amex will offer you bonus points for adding an authorized user, doing so can also help you double up your point earnings. That’s because you’ll not only earn points per dollar spent on your purchases, but you’ll also earn rewards on the authorized user’s purchases. Of course, you’ll only want to consider adding a member of your household or someone you trust to pay you back as an authorized user on your account. Authorized users can make charges on the credit card they’ve been added to but have no liability when it comes to paying the bill — that onus falls on you, the primary card holder. Choose carefully who you add to your account, and you can earn extra Amex points without lifting a finger. If you’ve picked up an American Express credit card, earned the welcome bonus offer and think others would enjoy doing the same, you can get rewarded for spreading the word to family and friends. American Express offers bonuses to current card holders when you refer someone and they are approved for an eligible card. You can earn up to 20,000 points per successful approval, though the exact bonus varies by card. To find out your card’s current referral bonus, head over to the Amex referral site. You’ll see referral bonuses based on your card. Simply enter your friend’s name and email address for each card you want to refer and they’ll get an email, inviting them to apply for the card. You can also copy the referral link on the page and share that with your friends and family directly. Referrals are a lucrative way to earn Amex Membership Rewards points for recommending credit cards to your friends and family. Keep in mind there is a limit to how many friends you can refer in a year. Booking travel with American Express is rewarding, too — you can earn bonus points on your credit card, plus you can often get additional perks and rewards. For example, with the Amex Platinum, you’ll get 5 points per dollar spent on hotels booked through Amex Travel. As an added incentive, you’ll receive perks like free breakfast for two, room upgrades when available and hotel credits to use at the spa or onsite restaurant just by booking with Fine Hotels & Resorts or the Hotel Collection. In general, booking travel through American Express pays off in more ways than one. Card holders can also utilize one of the most underrated benefits of having an Amex card: Amex Offers. With Amex Offers, card holders can earn statement credits or bonus points at select retailers. In other words, it’s the perfect opportunity to save some cash or earn bonus points for purchases you were already planning on making. To find and take advantage of Amex Offers, you’ll need to log in to your account. From there, scroll to the bottom of the page to the Amex Offers & Benefits section of the page. Be sure to click “View All” to load all of your eligible offers, and also be sure to select “Add to Card” in order to activate your Amex Offer. From there, you’ll be eligible to earn the bonus points or cash savings that come as part of each Amex Offer — so long as you use the registered card to make your purchase. Amex Offers are a massive perk of Amex cards that can save you money or earn you bonus points on purchases you were already planning to make. Thanks to a partnership with American Express, you can turn your Rakuten cash back rewards into Membership Rewards. It’s a great way to earn Membership Rewards points on regular purchases, without much added effort. If you already have a Rakuten account, you can easily switch your earning preference to Membership Rewards. Simply log into your account and follow these steps: After this, rewards get transferred to your Membership Rewards account quarterly. Now, for the fun part! Once you’ve earned Membership Rewards points, it’s time to put them to good use. Amex gives you several options to redeem points, but the best option is travel. You can choose between statement credits for travel bookings or transferring them to airline or hotel partners. Here’s a closer look at your options and how they work. American Express has 20 airline and hotel transfer partners — in other words, the Amex points you’ve earned can be transferred to any of the 20 hotel and airline partners. The best way to redeem Membership Rewards for maximum value is through airline transfers. But keep in mind that not all airline loyalty programs are equal. Ultimately, you’ll want to research which program will offer you the most in return, depending on what your travel plans are. With each of the partners, you’ll need to link your accounts, and you’ll also need to search for award availability with the airline of your choice before transferring any points. If you’re looking to transfer your Amex Membership Rewards points, these are the 20 airline and hotel partner options, as well as the transfer rate. It’s worth noting that Amex occasionally runs transfer promotions for certain airlines or hotels. So, at times, you can get more points in return than the standard transfer rate listed above. Bonuses like these can increase the value of your points by enabling you to book sought-after award tickets for substantially less. By transferring Amex Membership Rewards points to partner airlines, you unlock the ability to travel for next to nothing — in most cases when redeeming points and miles, you’ll just have to pay the taxes and fees on a ticket. As a result, points and miles open up the door for flying experiences that would otherwise be out of reach. Keep in mind that the most obvious airline choice may not always be your best option. Airlines typically have extensive alliance networks, allowing you to redeem points for partner airlines through their respective programs. For example, British Airways and American Airlines are both members of the Oneworld alliance, meaning you can transfer your Amex Membership Rewards points to British Airways Executive Club and redeem for flights operated by American Airlines. Because of the vast number of airline transfer partners, your options are virtually endless for where your Membership Rewards points can take you. But, some redemptions are better than others — particularly when it comes to award sweet spots. Some examples of these sweet spot awards using your Amex Membership Rewards points include the following: Generally speaking, you’ll get the most value out of your Amex Membership Rewards points by transferring them to airline partners. But that may not always make sense for all card holders — and it’s not your only option. If figuring out transfer partner options and award charts sounds daunting, you can also use your Membership Rewards for fixed redemptions. This includes using points for statement credits, travel bookings via Amex Travel, charitable donations, online shopping and gift cards. Using points for statement credits toward qualifying purchases isn’t a great use of your points because you’ll only get 0.6 cents per point in value. If you’re looking to maximize the value of your Amex points, this isn’t the best route to take. You’ll get slightly more value by redeeming your Membership Rewards for travel bookings. By doing so, you’ll get 1 cent per point toward airfare and 0.7 cents per point toward car rentals, hotels, cruises and vacation bookings. Business Platinum card holders also get a 35% rebate when redeeming points for flight bookings through Amex Travel. If you choose to redeem your points for gift cards, you’ll get 1 cent per point in value. However, if you use Pay With Points (valid with Amazon, Best Buy, Boxed, Dell and GrubHub and others), you’ll get a value of just 0.5 cents to 1 cent each (depending on the Amex card) — one of the lowest-value options out there. Generally speaking, you should try to extract as much value as possible out of your Amex Membership Rewards points. However, that’s not always the case for everyone. You may want to save a few dollars here or there on a purchase you’re making online. Ultimately, we love Membership Rewards points so much because you have the option to use them however you like — whether for travel, Amazon purchases, gift cards and more. When it comes to the worth of your Membership Rewards points, it ultimately comes down to how you use them. The value you can get ranges from about 0.6 cents each to about 2 cents each. Frequent flyer website The Points Guy values Amex Membership Rewards points at 2 cents apiece. Amex offers 0.6 cents per point in value when you use points for statement credits. Meanwhile, travel bookings will get you a somewhat higher 1 cent per point. The highest value comes from transferring points to airline and hotel partners, as detailed above. Convert your points to airline miles and you can get 2 cents or more in value on premium award redemptions. American Express Membership Rewards points are some of the most versatile and valuable out there. By earning them, you give yourself the option to save money on travel, buying gift cards, Amazon purchases and so much more. Ultimately, it’s the flexibility that makes having an Amex credit card so rewarding. Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Platinum card.Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Gold card.Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Business Platinum card.Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Business Gold card.Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Blue Business Plus card. Looking for a travel credit card? Find out which cards CNN Underscored Money chose as the best travel credit cards currently available.",CNN,01/04/2024,"['American Express Membership Rewards® are among the most valuable travel rewards points out there.', 'That’s primarily because they fall into the category of “transferable rewards,” meaning you’re not tied down to a single airline or hotel program with which you can redeem them.', 'In other words, you’re not just earning points that can transfer to Delta SkyMiles, but they can also transfer to any of the other 16 airlines in the Membership Rewards portfolio.', 'Having Membership Rewards points gives you options, and that’s always a good thing.', 'If you’re ready to give your rewards portfolio a boost, here’s everything you need to know about earning and redeeming Amex Membership Rewards.', 'You can earn Membership Rewards points in various ways.', 'Some require little effort, while others involve a heavier lift.', 'It’s a good idea to take advantage of all the options out there in order to maximize your earnings.', 'Here’s a look at how to earn Membership Rewards most efficiently.', 'The primary way to earn Amex points is through credit cards that earn Membership Rewards.', 'Amex has an extensive lineup of personal and business cards offering generous welcome bonuses and recurring benefits to help you earn maximum points.', 'These include well-known cards like The Platinum Card® from American Express and the American Express® Gold Card.', 'With a single welcome bonus offer, you can give a pretty substantial boost to your Membership Rewards points balance.', 'Here’s a look at the current welcome bonus offers on personal credit cards that earn Membership Rewards.', 'Keep in mind, too, that many of these cards carry an annual fee: All information about the Amex EveryDay Credit Card, Amex EveryDay Preferred Credit Card and the American Express Green Card has been collected independently by CNN Underscored.', 'Similarly, American Express offers a suite of business credit cards.', 'All information about the Business Green Rewards Card from American Express has been collected independently by CNN Underscored.', 'Keep in mind that several of these cards also carry an annual fee: Beyond the welcome bonus offers available, American Express makes it easy to earn Membership Rewards through category bonuses.', 'If you spend a lot on groceries, it may be worth considering the Amex Gold card to earn 4 points per dollar spent at US supermarkets (on up to $25,000 in purchases per year).', 'If you travel often, the Amex Platinum card is a great option for earning 5 points per dollar spent on eligible bookings made directly with an airline or with Amex Travel.', 'Plus, you’ll have access to airport lounges, like American Express Centurion Lounges and Delta Sky Clubs, among others.', 'When applying for American Express cards, be sure to take note of the application rules.', 'For example, you can’t earn an Amex welcome bonus more than once (with a few exceptions), and you generally won’t be approved for more than two cards every 90 days.', 'Before applying for a credit card, it’s important to do your research.', 'As mentioned before, American Express makes it manageable to earn bonus points long after the welcome bonus offer.', 'One of those ways is by adding an authorized user to your Amex card, which will occasionally earn you bonus points.', 'Aside from the special promotions where Amex will offer you bonus points for adding an authorized user, doing so can also help you double up your point earnings.', 'That’s because you’ll not only earn points per dollar spent on your purchases, but you’ll also earn rewards on the authorized user’s purchases.', 'Of course, you’ll only want to consider adding a member of your household or someone you trust to pay you back as an authorized user on your account.', 'Authorized users can make charges on the credit card they’ve been added to but have no liability when it comes to paying the bill — that onus falls on you, the primary card holder.', 'Choose carefully who you add to your account, and you can earn extra Amex points without lifting a finger.', 'If you’ve picked up an American Express credit card, earned the welcome bonus offer and think others would enjoy doing the same, you can get rewarded for spreading the word to family and friends.', 'American Express offers bonuses to current card holders when you refer someone and they are approved for an eligible card.', 'You can earn up to 20,000 points per successful approval, though the exact bonus varies by card.', 'To find out your card’s current referral bonus, head over to the Amex referral site.', 'You’ll see referral bonuses based on your card.', 'Simply enter your friend’s name and email address for each card you want to refer and they’ll get an email, inviting them to apply for the card.', 'You can also copy the referral link on the page and share that with your friends and family directly.', 'Referrals are a lucrative way to earn Amex Membership Rewards points for recommending credit cards to your friends and family.', 'Keep in mind there is a limit to how many friends you can refer in a year.', 'Booking travel with American Express is rewarding, too — you can earn bonus points on your credit card, plus you can often get additional perks and rewards.', 'For example, with the Amex Platinum, you’ll get 5 points per dollar spent on hotels booked through Amex Travel.', 'As an added incentive, you’ll receive perks like free breakfast for two, room upgrades when available and hotel credits to use at the spa or onsite restaurant just by booking with Fine Hotels & Resorts or the Hotel Collection.', 'In general, booking travel through American Express pays off in more ways than one.', 'Card holders can also utilize one of the most underrated benefits of having an Amex card: Amex Offers.', 'With Amex Offers, card holders can earn statement credits or bonus points at select retailers.', 'In other words, it’s the perfect opportunity to save some cash or earn bonus points for purchases you were already planning on making.', 'To find and take advantage of Amex Offers, you’ll need to log in to your account.', 'From there, scroll to the bottom of the page to the Amex Offers & Benefits section of the page.', 'Be sure to click “View All” to load all of your eligible offers, and also be sure to select “Add to Card” in order to activate your Amex Offer.', 'From there, you’ll be eligible to earn the bonus points or cash savings that come as part of each Amex Offer — so long as you use the registered card to make your purchase.', 'Amex Offers are a massive perk of Amex cards that can save you money or earn you bonus points on purchases you were already planning to make.', 'Thanks to a partnership with American Express, you can turn your Rakuten cash back rewards into Membership Rewards.', 'It’s a great way to earn Membership Rewards points on regular purchases, without much added effort.', 'If you already have a Rakuten account, you can easily switch your earning preference to Membership Rewards.', 'Simply log into your account and follow these steps: After this, rewards get transferred to your Membership Rewards account quarterly.', 'Now, for the fun part!', 'Once you’ve earned Membership Rewards points, it’s time to put them to good use.', 'Amex gives you several options to redeem points, but the best option is travel.', 'You can choose between statement credits for travel bookings or transferring them to airline or hotel partners.', 'Here’s a closer look at your options and how they work.', 'American Express has 20 airline and hotel transfer partners — in other words, the Amex points you’ve earned can be transferred to any of the 20 hotel and airline partners.', 'The best way to redeem Membership Rewards for maximum value is through airline transfers.', 'But keep in mind that not all airline loyalty programs are equal.', 'Ultimately, you’ll want to research which program will offer you the most in return, depending on what your travel plans are.', 'With each of the partners, you’ll need to link your accounts, and you’ll also need to search for award availability with the airline of your choice before transferring any points.', 'If you’re looking to transfer your Amex Membership Rewards points, these are the 20 airline and hotel partner options, as well as the transfer rate.', 'It’s worth noting that Amex occasionally runs transfer promotions for certain airlines or hotels.', 'So, at times, you can get more points in return than the standard transfer rate listed above.', 'Bonuses like these can increase the value of your points by enabling you to book sought-after award tickets for substantially less.', 'By transferring Amex Membership Rewards points to partner airlines, you unlock the ability to travel for next to nothing — in most cases when redeeming points and miles, you’ll just have to pay the taxes and fees on a ticket.', 'As a result, points and miles open up the door for flying experiences that would otherwise be out of reach.', 'Keep in mind that the most obvious airline choice may not always be your best option.', 'Airlines typically have extensive alliance networks, allowing you to redeem points for partner airlines through their respective programs.', 'For example, British Airways and American Airlines are both members of the Oneworld alliance, meaning you can transfer your Amex Membership Rewards points to British Airways Executive Club and redeem for flights operated by American Airlines.', 'Because of the vast number of airline transfer partners, your options are virtually endless for where your Membership Rewards points can take you.', 'But, some redemptions are better than others — particularly when it comes to award sweet spots.', 'Some examples of these sweet spot awards using your Amex Membership Rewards points include the following: Generally speaking, you’ll get the most value out of your Amex Membership Rewards points by transferring them to airline partners.', 'But that may not always make sense for all card holders — and it’s not your only option.', 'If figuring out transfer partner options and award charts sounds daunting, you can also use your Membership Rewards for fixed redemptions.', 'This includes using points for statement credits, travel bookings via Amex Travel, charitable donations, online shopping and gift cards.', 'Using points for statement credits toward qualifying purchases isn’t a great use of your points because you’ll only get 0.6 cents per point in value.', 'If you’re looking to maximize the value of your Amex points, this isn’t the best route to take.', 'You’ll get slightly more value by redeeming your Membership Rewards for travel bookings.', 'By doing so, you’ll get 1 cent per point toward airfare and 0.7 cents per point toward car rentals, hotels, cruises and vacation bookings.', 'Business Platinum card holders also get a 35% rebate when redeeming points for flight bookings through Amex Travel.', 'If you choose to redeem your points for gift cards, you’ll get 1 cent per point in value.', 'However, if you use Pay With Points (valid with Amazon, Best Buy, Boxed, Dell and GrubHub and others), you’ll get a value of just 0.5 cents to 1 cent each (depending on the Amex card) — one of the lowest-value options out there.', 'Generally speaking, you should try to extract as much value as possible out of your Amex Membership Rewards points.', 'However, that’s not always the case for everyone.', 'You may want to save a few dollars here or there on a purchase you’re making online.', 'Ultimately, we love Membership Rewards points so much because you have the option to use them however you like — whether for travel, Amazon purchases, gift cards and more.', 'When it comes to the worth of your Membership Rewards points, it ultimately comes down to how you use them.', 'The value you can get ranges from about 0.6 cents each to about 2 cents each.', 'Frequent flyer website The Points Guy values Amex Membership Rewards points at 2 cents apiece.', 'Amex offers 0.6 cents per point in value when you use points for statement credits.', 'Meanwhile, travel bookings will get you a somewhat higher 1 cent per point.', 'The highest value comes from transferring points to airline and hotel partners, as detailed above.', 'Convert your points to airline miles and you can get 2 cents or more in value on premium award redemptions.', 'American Express Membership Rewards points are some of the most versatile and valuable out there.', 'By earning them, you give yourself the option to save money on travel, buying gift cards, Amazon purchases and so much more.', 'Ultimately, it’s the flexibility that makes having an Amex credit card so rewarding.', 'Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Platinum card.', 'Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Gold card.', 'Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Business Platinum card.', 'Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Business Gold card.', 'Click here for rates and fees of the Amex Blue Business Plus card.', 'Looking for a travel credit card?', 'Find out which cardsCNN Underscored Moneychose as thebest travel credit cardscurrently available.']",0.5246481979610982,"If you’ve picked up an American Express credit card, earned the welcome bonus offer and think others would enjoy doing the same, you can get rewarded for spreading the word to family and friends.",But keep in mind that not all airline loyalty programs are equal.,0.9622429311275482,"With a single welcome bonus offer, you can give a pretty substantial boost to your Membership Rewards points balance.",,2024-05-19 Viral ‘courtesy’ letter American Airlines gives flight attendants shows how little they make,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/business/american-airlines-flight-attendants-wages/index.html," Updated 6:48 AM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","America’s cost of living crisis has stung new flight attendants, many of whom haven’t had an opportunity to renegotiate their contracts since the inflation spiral began several years ago. An employment verification letter American Airlines gives to some newly hired flight attendants documenting their salary has been circulating on Reddit, drawing attention to their low wages. The letter states that a new American Airlines flight attendant will have a “projected annual salary [of] $27,315 per year before incentives and taxes” and concludes, “Any courtesy you can provide would be appreciated.” The union representing American Airlines workers, the Association of Professional Flight Attendants (APFA), verified the authenticity of the letter, which is given to potential landlords or for other services where attendants need to verify their employment and income. The union represents 28,000 American Airlines flight attendants, and it is working on their first new contract in five years – a deal that stretches back before the pandemic and the inflation crisis. American Airlines did not respond to CNN’s requests for comment. Even as price increases are slowing down, the letter shows how, for some Americans, a little inflation relief isn’t nearly enough. The low wages for starting flight attendants – a job once seen as glitzy – underscores how many people are still struggling, despite what on paper looks like a strong economy and job market. This salary is above the federal poverty line of $15,060 for a single-person household. But that’s a national level and doesn’t take into account regional price differences, including in major metro areas where the cost of living can be significantly higher. In some states, such as Massachusetts, new flight attendants would qualify for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, commonly referred to as food stamps. For a single-person household, Massachusetts residents earning less than $30,120 a year are eligible for SNAP benefits. The union says that flight attendants’ low salaries compared to top airline executives is a prime example of “corporate greed.” New flight attendants at American Airlines start at $27,000 per year. Robert Isom, the CEO of American Airlines, earned $31.4 million last year — 1,162 times more than a new attendant. “We have flight attendants who are sleeping in their cars,” APFA communications director Paul Hartshorn told CNN. American Airlines flight attendants have not gotten a raise since 2019, and the union is escalating its push for a new contract to raise wages. Flight attendants for United Airlines, Alaska Airlines and other carriers are also pushing for new contracts to raise wages. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the mean annual wage for flight attendants in 2023 was $71,000. While being a flight attendant is a full-time job, many flight attendants only get about 75 hours of hourly pay a month. For many flight attendants, hourly pay basically begins when the plane’s door closes. They do not get paid for the hours they need to be at the airport or on the plane during boarding and deplaning. APFA is proposing a 33% pay increase to top out at $91 an hour during the first year of a new contract and increases of 5%, 4% and 4% for the remaining years of a four-year agreement. The union is also calling for full retroactive pay raises based on how much attendants flew during five years of negotiations. Under federal law, flight attendants cannot go on strike without permission from the government. The law, which is known as the Railway Labor Act, requires union members at airlines, among other certain industries, to remain on the job until after federal mediators declare an impasse in talks. But the union is calling on President Joe Biden and congressional leaders to urge the National Mediation Board to allow the union to pursue a potential strike. The National Mediation Board is a federal agency that oversees labor-management relations in the US railroad and airline industries. “American Airlines is not going to come to the table with an economic proposal that meets our needs unless they have the threat of a strike,” Hartshorn said. “Management needs the threat of a strike to move in the direction we need them to.” Flight attendants at Southwest Airlines last month ratified a new contract that includes pay raises totaling more than 33% over four years. “We expect to be compensated along the lines of Southwest,” he said.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['America’s cost of living crisis has stung new flight attendants, many of whom haven’t had an opportunity to renegotiate their contracts since the inflation spiral began several years ago.', 'An employment verification letter American Airlines gives to some newly hired flight attendants documenting their salary has been circulating on Reddit, drawing attention to their low wages.', 'The letter states that a new American Airlines flight attendant will have a “projected annual salary [of] $27,315 per year before incentives and taxes” and concludes, “Any courtesy you can provide would be appreciated.”', 'The union representing American Airlines workers, the Association of Professional Flight Attendants (APFA), verified the authenticity of the letter, which is given to potential landlords or for other services where attendants need to verify their employment and income.', 'The union represents 28,000 American Airlines flight attendants, and it is working on their first new contract in five years – a deal that stretches back before the pandemic and the inflation crisis.', 'American Airlines did not respond to CNN’s requests for comment.', 'Even as price increases are slowing down, the letter shows how, for some Americans, a little inflation relief isn’t nearly enough.', 'The low wages for starting flight attendants – a job once seen as glitzy – underscores how many people are still struggling, despite what on paper looks like a strong economy and job market.', 'This salary is above the federal poverty line of $15,060 for a single-person household.', 'But that’s a national level and doesn’t take into account regional price differences, including in major metro areas where the cost of living can be significantly higher.', 'In some states, such as Massachusetts, new flight attendants would qualify for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, commonly referred to as food stamps.', 'For a single-person household, Massachusetts residents earning less than $30,120 a year are eligible for SNAP benefits.', 'The union says that flight attendants’ low salaries compared to top airline executives is a prime example of “corporate greed.”', 'New flight attendants at American Airlines start at $27,000 per year.', 'RobertIsom, the CEO of American Airlines,earned $31.4 million last year — 1,162 timesmore than a new attendant.', '“We have flight attendants who are sleeping in their cars,” APFA communications director Paul Hartshorn told CNN.', 'American Airlines flight attendants have not gotten a raise since 2019, and the union is escalating its push for a new contract to raise wages.', 'Flight attendants for United Airlines, Alaska Airlines and other carriers are also pushing for new contracts to raise wages.', 'According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the mean annual wage for flight attendants in 2023 was $71,000.', 'While being a flight attendant is a full-time job, many flight attendants only get about 75 hours of hourly pay a month.', 'For many flight attendants, hourly pay basically begins when the plane’s door closes.', 'They do not get paid for the hours they need to be at the airport or on the plane during boarding and deplaning.', 'APFA is proposing a 33% pay increase to top out at $91 an hour during the first year of a new contract and increases of 5%, 4% and 4% for the remaining years of a four-year agreement.', 'The union is also calling for full retroactive pay raises based on how much attendants flew during five years of negotiations.', 'Under federal law, flight attendants cannot go on strike without permission from the government.', 'The law,which is known as the Railway Labor Act, requires union members at airlines, among other certain industries, to remain on the job until after federal mediators declare an impasse in talks.', 'But the union is calling on President Joe Biden and congressional leaders to urge the National Mediation Board to allow the union to pursue a potential strike.', 'The National Mediation Board is a federal agency that oversees labor-management relations in the US railroad and airline industries.', '“American Airlines is not going to come to the table with an economic proposal that meets our needs unless they have the threat of a strike,” Hartshorn said. “', 'Management needs the threat of a strike to move in the direction we need them to.”', 'Flight attendants at Southwest Airlines last month ratified a new contract that includes pay raises totaling more than 33% over four years.', '“We expect to be compensated along the lines of Southwest,” he said.']",0.0069779541875857,"The letter states that a new American Airlines flight attendant will have a “projected annual salary [of] $27,315 per year before incentives and taxes” and concludes, “Any courtesy you can provide would be appreciated.”","The union represents 28,000 American Airlines flight attendants, and it is working on their first new contract in five years – a deal that stretches back before the pandemic and the inflation crisis.",0.0346156358718872,Flight attendants at Southwest Airlines last month ratified a new contract that includes pay raises totaling more than 33% over four years.,"America’s cost of living crisis has stung new flight attendants, many of whom haven’t had an opportunity to renegotiate their contracts since the inflation spiral began several years ago.",2024-05-19 "NBC cut ties with Ronna McDaniel after extraordinary pressure, but its problems aren’t over",https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/27/media/nbc-ronna-mcdaniel-problems-are-not-over/index.html," Updated 8:16 AM EDT, Wed March 27, 2024 ","Only 80 hours elapsed between NBC News announcing Ronna McDaniel as a paid contributor and the network ousting her from that very role. But for the leadership at NBC Universal News Group, those were 80 painful hours. On Tuesday evening, following another full day in which the media rumor mill churned at warp speed, NBCU News Group boss Cesar Conde sent staff a memo, notifying his troops that he had reversed his decision to welcome the former Republican National Committee chair to “the team.” “After listening to the legitimate concerns of many of you, I have decided that Ronna McDaniel will not be an NBC News contributor,” Conde said, adding that he wanted to “personally apologize to our team members who felt we let them down.” Conde had no real choice. The embattled NBCU boss, who I’m told dealt with the crisis from an unknown location outside of 30 Rock, was facing an unprecedented rebellion from his most high-profile stars, who one by one went on the air and excoriated leadership’s decision to hire McDaniel. The only aspect of Conde’s note that was surprising was the fact that it came 48 hours late, allowing what started off as a crisis to fester and balloon into one of the worst corporate public relations calamities in recent memory. “What a sh*t show!” a media executive exclaimed to me Tuesday shortly after Conde relieved McDaniel of her NBC News credentials. In his note, Conde said he took “full responsibility” for McDaniel’s hire. But, he also did point the finger, telling staffers that hiring her was “a collective recommendation by some members of our leadership team.” Indeed, multiple people familiar with the matter have told me that the infighting among NBC executives over who was at fault for the disaster has reached a fever pitch, with various factions of the NBCU News Group assigning blame to others. Regardless of who is to blame, the entire affair made clear who is actually in control of the company — and it’s not Conde & Co. Despite the NBCU C-suite digging their heels in the sand as they resisted dumping McDaniel for days, they were ultimately forced to succumb to pressure from their talent. As a second media executive commented to me, it is now “very clear who is in charge” after the “weak leadership was put on full display.” “Has Cesar lost the room?” wondered a third media executive. While the Peacock family argues over who was really at fault, the company is facing a fresh public relations mess. Led by Donald Trump, right-wing personalities are already assailing the network as being overrun with intolerant woke leftists. “These Radical Left Lunatics are CRAZY and the top people at NBC ARE WEAK,” Trump raged on his Truth Social platform. Ari Fleischer, who served as press secretary under President George W. Bush, wrote on X: “What NBC is saying is if you’re for Trump, you don’t belong. Good. Let NBC be for Democrats only.” Of course, that narrative is intellectually dishonest. The objection to McDaniel from both within and outside of NBCU was not that she is a Republican. It wasn’t even that she was a Trump-supporting Republican. No, the objection stemmed from the fact that McDaniel was an active participant in the plot to subvert the 2020 vote. And, in addition to that disgraceful history, she had a lengthy track record smearing NBC News and MSNBC. Nevertheless, NBCU will now have to contend with such dishonest attacks being leveled by the right, which will follow them in the days, months, and even years to come. As unfair as it may be, they will certainly damage the network’s brand in Republican circles — a place it had gone through great pains to appeal to. NBCU will also have to grapple with McDaniel, who spent the last 24 hours or so interviewing lawyers as she gears up for a possible legal fight with the network, according to a person familiar with the matter. The rift between McDaniel and NBCU had grown to such an extent by Tuesday that she was not informed by network brass that she had been dismissed, I’m told. Instead, McDaniel learned of her ouster in press reports. While NBCU is being beaten up on the right, the company’s leadership was quickly praised by its journalists and top stars. Shortly after Conde sent out his memo, Rachel Maddow appeared on Joy Reid’s show, where the two lauded Conde for reversing course. “I think it is a show of strength and a show of respect for the people who work at this company and make us who we are,” Maddow said. “That leadership was willing to change on this, I’m grateful to them.”",CNN,27/03/2024,"['Only 80 hours elapsed between NBC News announcing Ronna McDaniel as a paid contributor and the network ousting her from that very role.', 'But for the leadership at NBC Universal News Group, those were 80painful hours.', 'On Tuesday evening, following another full day in which the media rumor mill churned at warp speed, NBCU News Group boss Cesar Conde sent staff a memo, notifying his troops that he had reversed his decision to welcome the former Republican National Committee chair to “the team.”', '“After listening to the legitimate concerns of many of you, I have decided that Ronna McDaniel will not be an NBC News contributor,” Conde said, adding that he wanted to “personally apologize to our team members who felt we let them down.”', 'Conde had no real choice.', 'The embattled NBCU boss, who I’m told dealt with the crisis from an unknown location outside of 30 Rock, was facing an unprecedented rebellion from his most high-profile stars, who one by one went on the air and excoriated leadership’s decision to hire McDaniel.', 'The only aspect of Conde’s note that was surprising was the fact that it came 48 hours late, allowing what started off as a crisis to fester and balloon into one of the worst corporate public relations calamities in recent memory.', '“What a sh*t show!”', 'a media executive exclaimed to me Tuesday shortly after Conde relieved McDaniel of her NBC News credentials.', 'In his note, Conde said he took “full responsibility” for McDaniel’s hire.', 'But, he also did point the finger, telling staffers that hiring her was “a collective recommendation by some members of our leadership team.”', 'Indeed, multiple people familiar with the matter have told me that the infighting among NBC executives over who was at fault for the disaster has reached a fever pitch, with various factions of the NBCU News Group assigning blame to others.', 'Regardless of who is to blame, the entire affair made clear who is actually in control of the company — and it’s not Conde & Co. Despite the NBCU C-suite digging their heels in the sand as they resisted dumping McDaniel for days, they were ultimately forced to succumb to pressure from their talent.', 'As a second media executive commented to me, it is now “very clear who is in charge” after the “weak leadership was put on full display.”', '“Has Cesar lost the room?”', 'wondered a third media executive.', 'While the Peacock family argues over who was really at fault, the company is facing a fresh public relations mess.', 'Led by Donald Trump, right-wing personalities are already assailing the network as being overrun with intolerant woke leftists.', '“These Radical Left Lunatics are CRAZY and the top people at NBC ARE WEAK,” Trump raged on his Truth Social platform.', 'Ari Fleischer, who served as press secretary under President George W. Bush, wrote on X: “What NBC is saying is if you’re for Trump, you don’t belong.', 'Good.', 'Let NBC be for Democrats only.”', 'Of course, that narrative is intellectually dishonest.', 'The objection to McDaniel from both within and outside of NBCU was not that she is a Republican.', 'It wasn’t even that she was a Trump-supporting Republican.', 'No, the objection stemmed from the fact that McDaniel was an active participant in the plot to subvert the 2020 vote.', 'And, in addition to that disgraceful history, she had a lengthy track record smearing NBC News and MSNBC.', 'Nevertheless, NBCU will now have to contend with such dishonest attacks being leveled by the right, which will follow them in the days, months, and even years to come.', 'As unfair as it may be, they will certainly damage the network’s brand in Republican circles — a place it had gone through great pains to appeal to.', 'NBCU will also have to grapple with McDaniel, who spent the last 24 hours or so interviewing lawyers as she gears up for a possible legal fight with the network, according to a person familiar with the matter.', 'The rift between McDaniel and NBCU had grown to such an extent by Tuesday that she was not informed by network brass that she had been dismissed, I’m told.', 'Instead, McDaniel learned of her ouster in press reports.', 'While NBCU is being beaten up on the right, the company’s leadership was quickly praised by its journalists and top stars.', 'Shortly after Conde sent out his memo, Rachel Maddow appeared on Joy Reid’s show, where the two lauded Conde for reversing course.', '“I think it is a show of strength and a show of respect for the people who work at this company and make us who we are,” Maddow said. “', 'That leadership was willing to change on this, I’m grateful to them.”']",-0.0743400881523301,"“I think it is a show of strength and a show of respect for the people who work at this company and make us who we are,” Maddow said. “","“These Radical Left Lunatics are CRAZY and the top people at NBC ARE WEAK,” Trump raged on his Truth Social platform.",-0.3914040706374428,"While NBCU is being beaten up on the right, the company’s leadership was quickly praised by its journalists and top stars.","As unfair as it may be, they will certainly damage the network’s brand in Republican circles — a place it had gone through great pains to appeal to.",2024-05-19 NBC News boss Cesar Conde faces backlash from his network’s anchors over ‘inexplicable’ decision to hire ex-RNC chair Ronna McDaniel,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/media/nbc-news-cesar-conde-ronna-mcdaniel-backlash/index.html," Published 8:05 AM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","Cesar Conde has a decision to make — and it’s not an especially difficult one. The NBCUniversal News Group chair is facing a torrent of backlash from his own staff after greenlighting the hire of former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel as a paid network contributor. Over the last 24 hours, the most prominent and recognizable NBC News and MSNBC personalities have voiced strong displeasure with the company’s decision to welcome McDaniel to “the team.” And they’re not doing it via anonymous comments to the press. They’re doing it on the record on NBCU’s own air. Chuck Todd broke the dam on Sunday’s “Meet the Press” with a set of candid comments about the hiring, and Rachel Maddow capped the flood of backlash Monday night with a blistering 30-minute monologue eviscerating the network’s leadership for the “inexplicable” move. Suffice to say, NBCU News Group is in unprecedented territory. Never has a network’s C-suite ever been so thoroughly flogged by its most high-profile stars in such no holds barred fashion. Saying that Conde simply has a crisis on his hands would be a contender for understatement of the year. It’s a five-alarm fire at NBCU News Group, and one of Conde’s own making. While NBC News president Rebecca Blumenstein and senior vice president of politics Carrie Budoff Brown were most directly responsible for McDaniel’s hiring, a decision that MSNBC boss Rashida Jones did not object to it at the time, the buck ultimately stops with Conde, who hold the real power at the Peacock Network. McDaniel’s hiring could not have happened without Conde’s blessing. It does not take a brilliant political mind with prescient foresight to understand that hiring McDaniel would ignite a firestorm of outrage — from both within 30 Rock and outside it. Conde, someone who ostensibly supports American democracy, should have rejected McDaniel’s hiring on the grounds that NBCU News Group could not put someone on its payroll who tried to subvert the 2020 vote. As so many of NBCU’s staffers have underscored, the objection to McDaniel is not that she is a Republican. It’s not even that she is a Donald Trump-supporting Republican. It’s that she was an active participant in the plot to overthrow the last presidential election. That is not to even mention McDaniel’s years of demonizing the press, smearing the journalists who work at NBC News and MSNBC as she sought to destroy the credibility of the organization that she ran to after being chased out of the RNC. The notion put forward by NBC that it needed to hire McDaniel to bring its viewers “an insider’s perspective on national politics and the future of the Republican Party” is absurd. If that’s the case, the network should move to hire free agents like Tucker Carlson or Candace Owens. They too have their hands on the pulse of the Republican Party. In fact, they represent much more of where the GOP stands today than McDaniel. So, using NBC’s logic, why not hire them? (Spoiler: News organizations rightfully have established basic standards for paid contributors. Asking that your employees have a commitment to democracy, to the truth, and to basic decency is not a big ask.) But even if Conde has no allegiance to basic democratic principles, which this hire calls into question, given that he is known to be a political player who cares deeply about his own image in the press, he should have been wise enough to foresee that hiring McDaniel would be an ill-conceived move. How this did not occur to Conde is unfathomable and shows a tremendous lack of judgment. Even more bizarre is Conde’s management, or lack thereof, since the controversy erupted. It was clear early on that his employees at NBC News and MSNBC did not support McDaniel’s hiring. If that was not evident on Friday, it was clear as day on Sunday after “Meet the Press.” The network’s employees were not only flabbergasted and demoralized by the move, but absolutely enraged by it. At that point, the writing should have been on the wall for Conde — as it was for every other media executive that I have spoken with over the last 24 hours. It is evident that McDaniel has no real future as an NBC analyst and the decision to bring her on as a contributor will have to be reversed. After all, which NBC or MSNBC program is going to invite her on after all of this? The only real question for Conde after the Sunday morning scolding should have been how he chose to back out of the deal in the least painful way possible. To be fully honest, I very much expected a Sunday evening announcement from NBC, one that would have earned praise from the company’s staff and quickly been swept away by the rush of Trump news Monday morning. But no such announcement came. Instead, Conde has allowed the mess to spiral absolutely out of control. MSNBC’s top stars hammered the network’s leadership throughout the day Monday over the hire. NBC News’ Guild blasted Conde, saying in a statement that under him the company had quietly laid off employees over the last month and instead chosen to “prioritize an election denier over its reporters.” The already severe crisis was allowed to blossom into one of the worst corporate public relations catastrophes in recent memory. All the while, Conde has remained silent. I asked his spokesperson, Stephen Labaton, on Monday whether the NBCU News Group boss had any comment on the situation. Does he have any regret? I didn’t get an on-the-record response. Suffice to say, however, that what Conde does moving forward will say a lot about his character and commitment to democratic values. It will also say a lot about the NBCU News Group and what type of organization it is. In her biting monologue on Monday night, however, Maddow did offer Conde a way out of this mess. “Mistakes will be made,” Maddow said.”But our resilience as a democracy is going to be recognizing when decisions are bad ones and reversing those bad decisions. Hearing legitimate criticism, responding to it, and correcting course. Not digging in. Not blaming others. Take a minute. Acknowledge that maybe it wasn’t the right call.” “It is a sign of strength, not weakness, to acknowledge when you are wrong,” Maddow added. “It is a sign of strength. And our country needs us to be strong now.”",CNN,26/03/2024,"['Cesar Conde has a decision to make — and it’s not an especially difficult one.', 'The NBCUniversal News Group chair is facing a torrent of backlash from his own staff after greenlighting the hire of former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel as a paid network contributor.', 'Over the last 24 hours, the most prominent and recognizable NBC News and MSNBC personalities have voiced strong displeasure with the company’s decision to welcome McDaniel to “the team.”', 'And they’re not doing it via anonymous comments to the press.', 'They’re doing it on the record on NBCU’s own air.', 'Chuck Todd broke the dam on Sunday’s “Meet the Press” with a set of candid comments about the hiring, and Rachel Maddow capped the flood of backlash Monday night with a blistering 30-minute monologue eviscerating the network’s leadership for the “inexplicable” move.', 'Suffice to say, NBCU News Group is in unprecedented territory.', 'Never has a network’s C-suite ever been so thoroughly flogged by its most high-profile stars in such no holds barred fashion.', 'Saying that Conde simply has a crisis on his hands would be a contender for understatement of the year.', 'It’s a five-alarm fire at NBCU News Group, and one of Conde’s own making.', 'While NBC News president Rebecca Blumenstein and senior vice president of politics Carrie Budoff Brown were most directly responsible for McDaniel’s hiring, a decision that MSNBC boss Rashida Jones did not object to it at the time, the buck ultimately stops with Conde, who hold the real power at the Peacock Network.', 'McDaniel’s hiring could not have happened without Conde’s blessing.', 'It does not take a brilliant political mind with prescient foresight to understand that hiring McDaniel would ignite a firestorm of outrage — from both within 30 Rock and outside it.', 'Conde, someone who ostensibly supports American democracy, should have rejected McDaniel’s hiring on the grounds that NBCU News Group could not put someone on its payroll who tried to subvert the 2020 vote.', 'As so many of NBCU’s staffers have underscored, the objection to McDaniel is not that she is a Republican.', 'It’s not even that she is a Donald Trump-supporting Republican.', 'It’s that she was an active participant in the plot to overthrow the last presidential election.', 'That is not to even mention McDaniel’s years of demonizing the press, smearing the journalists who work at NBC News and MSNBC as she sought to destroy the credibility of the organization that she ran to after being chased out of the RNC.', 'The notion put forward by NBC that it needed to hire McDaniel to bring its viewers “an insider’s perspective on national politics and the future of the Republican Party” is absurd.', 'If that’s the case, the network should move to hire free agents like Tucker Carlson or Candace Owens.', 'They too have their hands on the pulse of the Republican Party.', 'In fact, they represent much more of where the GOP stands today than McDaniel.', 'So, using NBC’s logic, why not hire them? (', 'Spoiler: News organizations rightfully have established basic standards for paid contributors.', 'Asking that your employees have a commitment to democracy, to the truth, and to basic decency is not a big ask.)', 'But even if Conde has no allegiance to basic democratic principles, which this hire calls into question, given that he is known to be a political player who cares deeply about his own image in the press, he should have been wise enough to foresee that hiring McDaniel would be an ill-conceived move.', 'How this did not occur to Conde is unfathomable and shows a tremendous lack of judgment.', 'Even more bizarre is Conde’s management, or lack thereof, since the controversy erupted.', 'It was clear early on that his employees at NBC News and MSNBC did not support McDaniel’s hiring.', 'If that was not evident on Friday, it was clear as day on Sunday after “Meet the Press.”', 'The network’s employees were not only flabbergasted and demoralized by the move, but absolutely enraged by it.', 'At that point, the writing should have been on the wall for Conde — as it was for every other media executive that I have spoken with over the last 24 hours.', 'It is evident that McDaniel has no real future as an NBC analyst and the decision to bring her on as a contributor will have to be reversed.', 'After all, which NBC or MSNBC program is going to invite her on after all of this?', 'The only real question for Conde after the Sunday morning scolding should have been how he chose to back out of the deal in the least painful way possible.', 'To be fully honest, I very much expected a Sunday evening announcement from NBC, one that would have earned praise from the company’s staff and quickly been swept away by the rush of Trump news Monday morning.', 'But no such announcement came.', 'Instead, Conde has allowed the mess to spiral absolutely out of control.', 'MSNBC’s top stars hammered the network’s leadership throughout the day Monday over the hire.', 'NBC News’ Guild blasted Conde, saying in a statement that under him the company had quietly laid off employees over the last month and instead chosen to “prioritize an election denier over its reporters.”', 'The already severe crisis was allowed to blossom into one of the worst corporate public relations catastrophes in recent memory.', 'All the while, Conde has remained silent.', 'I asked his spokesperson, Stephen Labaton, on Monday whether the NBCU News Group boss had any comment on the situation.', 'Does he have any regret?', 'I didn’t get an on-the-record response.', 'Suffice to say, however, that what Conde does moving forward will say a lot about his character and commitment to democratic values.', 'It will also say a lot about the NBCU News Group and what type of organization it is.', 'In her biting monologue on Monday night, however, Maddow did offer Conde a way out of this mess.', '“Mistakes will be made,” Maddow said.', '”But our resilience as a democracy is going to be recognizing when decisions are bad ones and reversing those bad decisions.', 'Hearing legitimate criticism, responding to it, and correcting course.', 'Not digging in.', 'Not blaming others.', 'Take a minute.', 'Acknowledge that maybe it wasn’t the right call.”', '“It is a sign of strength, not weakness, to acknowledge when you are wrong,” Maddow added. “', 'It is a sign of strength.', 'And our country needs us to be strong now.”']",-0.032955005531589,"Over the last 24 hours, the most prominent and recognizable NBC News and MSNBC personalities have voiced strong displeasure with the company’s decision to welcome McDaniel to “the team.”",The already severe crisis was allowed to blossom into one of the worst corporate public relations catastrophes in recent memory.,-0.5018035081716684,"To be fully honest, I very much expected a Sunday evening announcement from NBC, one that would have earned praise from the company’s staff and quickly been swept away by the rush of Trump news Monday morning.","The network’s employees were not only flabbergasted and demoralized by the move, but absolutely enraged by it.",2024-05-19 Wealthy Americans are starting to spend more carefully,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/19/economy/stocks-week-ahead-wealthy-americans-spending/index.html," Published 7:30 AM EDT, Sun May 19, 2024 ","A version of this story first appeared in CNN Business’ Before the Bell newsletter. Not a subscriber? You can sign up right here. You can listen to an audio version of the newsletter by clicking the same link. Americans with deep pockets have played a growing role in powering the US economy with their spending. But their days of splurging like there’s no tomorrow might be coming to an end. US household wealth surged in recent years, despite the scourge of high inflation and the Federal Reserve’s bitter medicine of elevated borrowing costs to rein in price increases. A robust stock market coupled with rising home values have boosted Americans’ wealth from 2019 through 2022, according to a Federal Reserve report on household finances. That increase is known as “the wealth effect,” and it has continued to shore up Americans’ finances as stocks shatter records and high bond yields beef up savings accounts. Plus, Americans who locked in a low mortgage rate before the Fed began to hike interest rates in 2022 and have decided to stay put have been shielded from the effects of high mortgage rates. Put together, that means many consumers have not only been able to withstand inflation, to a degree, but they’ve also been able to spend on travel, concerts and big-ticket items. US economic growth accelerated at a brisk pace in 2023, largely thanks to the US consumer. And it’s Americans older than 54 who hold the vast amount of household wealth in the US, more than 70%, according to Fed data. But the economy’s momentum has slowed a bit recently with figures on employment and retail spending for April coming in weaker than expected. While the broader economy remains healthy, including the job market with sub-4% unemployment, there are signs that an important corner has been turned. The shifting behavior of wealthy Americans is one of them. “It’s well known that the lowest income consumer is really struggling with inflation, but from a purely economic standpoint, it is the higher quintiles of earners that do the most spending,” Nanette Abuhoff Jacobson, global investment strategist at Hartford Funds, told CNN. There’s been some evidence of wealthy Americans growing cautious in the latest round of company earnings results. British luxury retailer Burberry reported last week that its profits plummeted by 40% in the budget year ending in late March. Sales in the Americas dropped off by 12% over the year. “Executing our plan against a backdrop of slowing luxury demand has been challenging,” Jonathan Akeroyd, Burberry’s chief executive, said in a statement. LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton reported in its latest earnings results last month that demand for high-end liquors has declined sharply in the US, leading to high inventory levels for the French luxury conglomerate’s alcoholic beverages division. Walmart, which traditionally caters to lower and middle-income Americans, even reported last week that its gains last quarter were “primarily driven by upper-income households,” or those making more than $100,000 a year. But the broader picture isn’t all doom and gloom. It’s been mixed: Royal Caribbean Cruises topped expectations for its first-quarter earnings results thanks to solid bookings and robust onboard spending. Demand for cruises, arguably an activity for the well-off, shows there isn’t this mass retrenchment from rich Americans just yet. But some are thinking twice before swiping that card or clicking on the purchase button. Consumers overall have become more price sensitive, according to various examples in the Fed’s periodic collection of anecdotes known as the Beige Book. “When we talk to CEOs and CFOs, they’re saying that people are pushing back, so companies now aren’t feeling as comfortable pushing through price increases,” said Jacobson of Hartford Funds. “And company earnings in the consumer discretionary area are ones to continue to watch for signs of consumer stress.” Ariel Barnes plunged into a credit card debt spiral in college, and a decade later she’s yet to escape. Barnes, a manager of gift processing at Jackson State University, has maxed out seven credit cards and is struggling to make minimum payments on $30,000 of credit card debt. “The interest is so high that it’s hard to get out of it,” Barnes, who is 28 years old and lives in Jackson, Mississippi, told CNN in a phone interview on Thursday.Barnes is hardly alone. Roughly one in seven (15.3%) Gen Z credit card borrowers have maxed out their credit cards, according to new research from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. (The NY Fed defined Gen Z as borrowers born between 1995 and 2011, though others mark the cut off as 1996 or 1997). By comparison, just 4.8% of Baby Boomer borrowers and 9.6% of Gen Xers have maxed out their credit cards, which can be a sign of a severely tight cash-flow problem, my colleague Matt Egan reports.Read more here. Monday: Earnings from Palo Alto Networks, Trip.com and Zoom. Federal Reserve officials Michael Barr, Christopher Waller, Philip Jefferson and Raphael Bostic deliver remarks. Tuesday: Earnings from Lowe’s, AutoZone, Macy’s and Urban Outfitters. Federal Reserve officials Christopher Waller, John Williams, Raphael Bostic, Michael Barr, Loretta Mester and Susan Collins deliver remarks. Wednesday: Earnings from NVIDIA, TJX, Target, Guess?, Petco, Children’s Place and Red Robin. The UK’s Office for National Statistics releases April inflation data. The National Association of Realtors reports April home sales. The Federal Reserve release minutes from its May policymaking meeting. Thursday: Earnings from Intuit, Medtronic, Workday, Ross, Dollar Tree, Burlington, Ralph Lauren, Build-A-Bear Workshop and 23andMe. The US Labor Department reports the number of new applications for jobless benefits in the week ending May 18. The Chicago Fed releases its National Activity Index for April. S&P Global releases May business surveys gauging economic activity in the US manufacturing and services sectors. The US Commerce Department reports new home sales in April. Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic delivers remarks. Friday: Earnings from Booz Allen Hamilton, Buckle and Big Lots. The US Commerce Department reports new orders for durable goods in April. Fed Governor Christopher Waller delivers remarks. The University of Michigan releases its final reading of consumer sentiment in May.",CNN,19/05/2024,"['A version of this story first appeared in CNN Business’ Before the Bell newsletter.', 'Not a subscriber?', 'You can sign upright here.', 'You can listen to an audio version of the newsletter by clicking the same link.', 'Americans with deep pockets have played a growing role in powering the US economy with their spending.', 'But their days of splurging like there’s no tomorrow might be coming to an end.', 'US household wealthsurged in recent years, despite the scourge of high inflation and the Federal Reserve’s bitter medicine of elevated borrowing costs to rein in price increases.', 'A robust stock market coupled with rising home values have boosted Americans’ wealth from 2019 through 2022, according to a Federal Reserve report on household finances.', 'That increase is known as “the wealth effect,” and it has continued to shore up Americans’ finances as stocksshatter recordsand high bond yields beef up savings accounts.', 'Plus, Americans who locked in a low mortgage rate before the Fed began to hike interest rates in 2022 and have decided to stay puthave been shieldedfrom the effects of high mortgage rates.', 'Put together, that means many consumers have not only been able to withstand inflation, to a degree, but they’ve also been able to spend on travel, concerts and big-ticket items.', 'US economic growth accelerated at a brisk pace in 2023, largely thanks to the US consumer.', 'And it’s Americans older than 54 who hold the vast amount of household wealth in the US, more than 70%, according to Fed data.', 'But the economy’s momentum has slowed a bit recently with figures onemploymentand retail spending for April coming in weaker than expected.', 'While the broader economy remains healthy, including the job market with sub-4% unemployment, there are signs that an important corner has been turned.', 'The shifting behavior of wealthy Americans is one of them.', '“It’s well known that the lowest income consumer is really struggling with inflation, but from a purely economic standpoint, it is the higher quintiles of earners that do the most spending,” Nanette Abuhoff Jacobson, global investment strategist at Hartford Funds, told CNN.', 'There’s been some evidence of wealthy Americans growing cautious in the latest round of company earnings results.', 'British luxury retailer Burberry reported last week that its profits plummeted by 40% in the budget year ending in late March.', 'Sales in the Americas dropped off by 12% over the year.', '“Executing our plan against a backdrop of slowing luxury demand has been challenging,” Jonathan Akeroyd, Burberry’s chief executive, said in a statement.', 'LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton reported in its latest earnings results last month that demand for high-end liquors has declined sharply in the US, leading to high inventory levels for the French luxury conglomerate’s alcoholic beverages division.', 'Walmart, which traditionally caters to lower and middle-income Americans, even reported last week that its gains last quarter were “primarily driven by upper-income households,” or those making more than $100,000 a year.', 'But the broader picture isn’t all doom and gloom.', 'It’s been mixed: Royal Caribbean Cruises topped expectations for its first-quarter earnings results thanks to solid bookings and robust onboard spending.', 'Demand for cruises, arguably an activity for the well-off, shows there isn’t this mass retrenchment from rich Americans just yet.', 'But some are thinking twice before swiping that card or clicking on the purchase button.', 'Consumers overall have become more price sensitive, according to various examples in the Fed’s periodic collection of anecdotes known as the Beige Book.', '“When we talk to CEOs and CFOs, they’re saying that people are pushing back, so companies now aren’t feeling as comfortable pushing through price increases,” said Jacobson of Hartford Funds.', '“And company earnings in the consumer discretionary area are ones to continue to watch for signs of consumer stress.”', 'Ariel Barnes plunged into a credit card debt spiral in college, and a decade later she’s yet to escape.', 'Barnes, a manager of gift processing at Jackson State University, has maxed out seven credit cards and is struggling to make minimum payments on $30,000 of credit card debt.', '“The interest is so high that it’s hard to get out of it,” Barnes, who is 28 years old and lives in Jackson, Mississippi, told CNN in a phone interview on Thursday.', 'Barnes is hardly alone.', 'Roughly one in seven (15.3%) Gen Z credit card borrowers have maxed out their credit cards, according to new research from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. (', 'The NY Fed defined Gen Z as borrowers born between 1995 and 2011, though others mark the cut off as 1996 or 1997).', 'By comparison, just 4.8% of Baby Boomer borrowers and 9.6% of Gen Xers have maxed out their credit cards, which can be a sign of a severely tight cash-flow problem, my colleague Matt Egan reports.', 'Read more here.', 'Monday:Earnings from Palo Alto Networks, Trip.com and Zoom.', 'Federal Reserve officials Michael Barr, Christopher Waller, Philip Jefferson and Raphael Bostic deliver remarks.', 'Tuesday:Earnings from Lowe’s, AutoZone, Macy’s and Urban Outfitters.', 'Federal Reserve officials Christopher Waller, John Williams, Raphael Bostic, Michael Barr, Loretta Mester and Susan Collins deliver remarks.', 'Wednesday:Earnings from NVIDIA, TJX, Target, Guess?,', 'Petco, Children’s Place and Red Robin.', 'The UK’s Office for National Statistics releases April inflation data.', 'The National Association of Realtors reports April home sales.', 'The Federal Reserve release minutes from its May policymaking meeting.', 'Thursday:Earnings from Intuit, Medtronic, Workday, Ross, Dollar Tree, Burlington, Ralph Lauren, Build-A-Bear Workshop and 23andMe.', 'The US Labor Department reports the number of new applications for jobless benefits in the week ending May 18.', 'The Chicago Fed releases its National Activity Index for April.', 'S&P Global releases May business surveys gauging economic activity in the US manufacturing and services sectors.', 'The US Commerce Department reports new home sales in April.', 'Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic delivers remarks.', 'Friday:Earnings from Booz Allen Hamilton, Buckle and Big Lots.', 'The US Commerce Department reports new orders for durable goods in April.', 'Fed Governor Christopher Waller delivers remarks.', 'The University of Michigan releases its final reading of consumer sentiment in May.']",0.0941178414718663,"A robust stock market coupled with rising home values have boosted Americans’ wealth from 2019 through 2022, according to a Federal Reserve report on household finances.",But the broader picture isn’t all doom and gloom.,0.0081581672032674,"A robust stock market coupled with rising home values have boosted Americans’ wealth from 2019 through 2022, according to a Federal Reserve report on household finances.","LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton reported in its latest earnings results last month that demand for high-end liquors has declined sharply in the US, leading to high inventory levels for the French luxury conglomerate’s alcoholic beverages division.",2024-05-19 Uber will soon let riders book a shuttle to the airport,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/15/tech/uber-shuttle-airport-concert-annual-product-update/index.html," Published 11:00 AM EDT, Wed May 15, 2024 ","Uber wants to make it cheaper to get a ride to the airport, concerts or sporting events. The rideshare company on Wednesday announced the launch of Uber Shuttle, an offering that will let users book up to five seats in a shuttle from a central location to an event or the airport – for less than the cost of a regular Uber ride. The cost of the shuttle rides won’t be affected by surge pricing, a common affliction when lots of people are looking for rides at the same time. Riders can book their space on the shuttles, which will hold between 14 and 55 seats, up to a week in advance and will receive a QR code ticket to board. Uber plans to partner with local shuttle companies with commercially licensed drivers to facilitate the offering, but users will be able to rate and tip drivers within the Uber app like with any other ride. Uber has previously rolled out early shuttle tests, including in India, and as an offering for corporate customers. The feature will roll out to US consumers this summer for event venues in select cities, including Chicago, Pittsburgh, Charlotte and Miami, with plans to expand more broadly in the coming months. The Uber Shuttle announcement was one of several new features announced at the company’s annual product update Wednesday, which also include a discounted Uber One membership program for students and the ability for Uber Eats users to order from Costco even if they don’t have a membership for the big box retailer. Taken together, the announcements are designed to give people even more reasons to use its products, while focusing on affordability with group rides and other discounted offerings. The strategy comes at a time when consumers are pulling back on spending in the face of higher prices for a range of goods, from groceries to clothing. The diversification of Uber’s business beyond traditional ride hailing has also helped it maintain its leadership position over rival Lyft. “The simple act of sharing, whether it’s rides or groceries, makes your every day just a little bit cheaper,” Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi said at the company’s Wednesday product event in New York City. Also among Uber’s Wednesday announcements is a feature designed for caregivers, which will let them book rides, order groceries and purchase medical supplies and other over-the-counter items for loved ones. In certain cases, the person receiving care’s medical benefits can be applied to cover the rides and orders, and a three-way chat will let the caregiver, rider and driver communicate together. (The feature builds upon a similar offering that lets healthcare providers book rides for patients.) Uber will also let riders pre-book shared rides — the evolution of what used to be called Uber Pool, where riders can split a ride with strangers going in a similar direction — for a discount, a move it says was inspired by growth in people using the app during commuting hours. The feature will initially launch in New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, San Diego and Atlanta, before expanding to other areas. “Sharing is an essential part of the future of cities at our scale,” Camiel Irving, general manager of US and Canada mobility operations, said Wednesday.",CNN,15/05/2024,"['Uber wants to make it cheaper to get a ride to the airport, concerts or sporting events.', 'The rideshare company on Wednesday announced the launch of Uber Shuttle, an offering that will let users book up to five seats in a shuttle from a central location to an event or the airport – for less than the cost of a regular Uber ride.', 'The cost of the shuttle rides won’t be affected by surge pricing, a common affliction when lots of people are looking for rides at the same time.', 'Riders can book their space on the shuttles, which will hold between 14 and 55 seats, up to a week in advance and will receive a QR code ticket to board.', 'Uber plans to partner with local shuttle companies with commercially licensed drivers to facilitate the offering, but users will be able to rate and tip drivers within the Uber app like with any other ride.', 'Uber has previously rolled out early shuttle tests, including in India, and as an offering for corporate customers.', 'The feature will roll out to US consumers this summer for event venues in select cities, including Chicago, Pittsburgh, Charlotte and Miami, with plans to expand more broadly in the coming months.', 'The Uber Shuttle announcement was one of several new features announced at the company’s annual product update Wednesday, which also include a discounted Uber One membership program for students and the ability for Uber Eats users to order from Costco even if they don’t have a membership for the big box retailer.', 'Taken together, the announcements are designed to give people even more reasons to use its products, while focusing on affordability with group rides and other discounted offerings.', 'The strategy comes at a time when consumers are pulling back on spending in the face of higher prices for a range of goods, from groceries to clothing.', 'The diversification of Uber’s business beyond traditional ride hailing has also helped it maintain its leadership position over rival Lyft.', '“The simple act of sharing, whether it’s rides or groceries, makes your every day just a little bit cheaper,” Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi said at the company’s Wednesday product event in New York City.', 'Also among Uber’s Wednesday announcements is a feature designed for caregivers, which will let them book rides, order groceries and purchase medical supplies and other over-the-counter items for loved ones.', 'In certain cases, the person receiving care’s medical benefits can be applied to cover the rides and orders, and a three-way chat will let the caregiver, rider and driver communicate together. (', 'The feature builds upon a similar offering that lets healthcare providers book rides for patients.)', 'Uber will also let riders pre-book shared rides — the evolution of what used to be called Uber Pool, where riders can split a ride with strangers going in a similar direction — for a discount, a move it says was inspired by growth in people using the app during commuting hours.', 'The feature will initially launch in New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, San Diego and Atlanta, before expanding to other areas.', '“Sharing is an essential part of the future of cities at our scale,” Camiel Irving, general manager of US and Canada mobility operations, said Wednesday.']",0.2318832590857157,"Uber will also let riders pre-book shared rides — the evolution of what used to be called Uber Pool, where riders can split a ride with strangers going in a similar direction — for a discount, a move it says was inspired by growth in people using the app during commuting hours.","The cost of the shuttle rides won’t be affected by surge pricing, a common affliction when lots of people are looking for rides at the same time.",0.6645895739396414,The diversification of Uber’s business beyond traditional ride hailing has also helped it maintain its leadership position over rival Lyft.,"The strategy comes at a time when consumers are pulling back on spending in the face of higher prices for a range of goods, from groceries to clothing.",2024-05-19 Record number of overseas tourists visit Scotland,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cv2rg3rjdvjo,2024-05-17T12:40:16.226Z,"Tourism bosses have described record international visitor numbers for Scotland in 2023 as a ""turning point"" for the industry. Almost four million people from overseas visited the country last year, an increase of 15% on 2019, the last year before the Covid pandemic. Unprecedented numbers from North America helped break the previous record of 3.7m, which was set in 2018. Visitors to Scotland in 2023 spent £3.6bn - up 41% on 2019 and 13% on 2022 - although those increases do not account for inflation. Scotland is the only part of the UK that has seen an increase in comparison to 2019, although the International Passenger Survey by the Office of National Statistics (ONS) found that the majority of nations and regions saw growth compared to 2022. VisitScotland's chief executive Malcolm Roughead said international tourism was ""hugely important"" to the Scottish economy. He added: ""These figures mark a turning point for tourism in Scotland, showing not only recovery but crucially growth in international visitors with number of visits and spend now above 2019 levels. Vicki Miller of VisitScotland told BBC Scotland News that the figures were a ""significant milestone"" for the tourism sector. She estimated that just under 20% of visitors to Scotland now come from international markets. She added: ""That 19% from international markets is really important in terms of spend, because they stay longer and typically spend more. It accounts for 46% of the value of tourism to Scotland."" VisitScotland's own research suggested that visitors are increasingly looking for unique experiences, such as designing tartan or bagpipe lessons, which Ms Miller said reflected a desire for ""once in a lifetime"" holidays Wellness activities, like wild swimming and food and drink trips, are also popular. The figures revealed that visitors from North America were up by 16% and from Europe by 19%. Tourists from ""other countries"", a category including Australia and China, saw the greatest spike to 2022, soaring by 53%. ",BBC,17/05/2024,"['Tourism bosses have described record international visitor numbers for Scotland in 2023 as a ""turning point"" for the industry.', 'Almost four million people from overseas visited the country last year, an increase of 15% on 2019, the last year before the Covid pandemic.', 'Unprecedented numbers from North America helped break the previous record of 3.7m, which was set in 2018.', 'Visitors to Scotland in 2023 spent £3.6bn - up 41% on 2019 and 13% on 2022 - although those increases do not account for inflation.', 'Scotland is the only part of the UK that has seen an increase in comparison to 2019, although the International Passenger Survey by the Office of National Statistics (ONS) found that the majority of nations and regions saw growth compared to 2022.', 'VisitScotland\'s chief executive Malcolm Roughead said international tourism was ""hugely important"" to the Scottish economy.', 'He added: ""These figures mark a turning point for tourism in Scotland, showing not only recovery but crucially growth in international visitors with number of visits and spend now above 2019 levels.', 'Vicki Miller of VisitScotland told BBC Scotland News that the figures were a ""significant milestone"" for the tourism sector.', 'She estimated that just under 20% of visitors to Scotland now come from international markets.', 'She added: ""That 19% from international markets is really important in terms of spend, because they stay longer and typically spend more.', 'It accounts for 46% of the value of tourism to Scotland.""', 'VisitScotland\'s own research suggested that visitors are increasingly looking for unique experiences, such as designing tartan or bagpipe lessons, which Ms Miller said reflected a desire for ""once in a lifetime"" holidays Wellness activities, like wild swimming and food and drink trips, are also popular.', 'The figures revealed that visitors from North America were up by 16% and from Europe by 19%.', 'Tourists from ""other countries"", a category including Australia and China, saw the greatest spike to 2022, soaring by 53%.']",0.2959041133654469,"VisitScotland's own research suggested that visitors are increasingly looking for unique experiences, such as designing tartan or bagpipe lessons, which Ms Miller said reflected a desire for ""once in a lifetime"" holidays Wellness activities, like wild swimming and food and drink trips, are also popular.",,0.997717104174874,Visitors to Scotland in 2023 spent £3.6bn - up 41% on 2019 and 13% on 2022 - although those increases do not account for inflation.,,2024-05-19 3 ways Apple’s monopoly lawsuit could change the iPhone experience for fans,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/tech/apples-iphone-changes-lawsuit/index.html," Published 6:30 AM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","When Apple launched its first Mac computer in 1984, with its iconic Mac smiley-face “hello” greeting, it wanted to differentiate itself in the fledgling PC market. The Mac was approachable with its friendly, innovative design – Apple’s way of setting the Mac apart in the confusing PC landscape. That consumer-friendly mantra still exists today, with Apple carefully curating an easy-breezy yet controlled user experience across its products, including the billions of iPhones used around the world. But the Biden administration believes Apple took that too far. On Thursday, the Department of Justice sued Apple for illegally monopolizing the smartphone market. In a press conference, the government provided a long list of how Apple has allegedly squashed competition with restrictive app store terms, high fees and its “walled-garden” approach, restricting how third-party companies interact with its brands and services. The company denied the lawsuit’s allegations and said it plans to fight them. Apple added that the lawsuit could empower the government “to take a heavy hand in designing people’s technology.” But if successful, the lawsuit could ripple across Apple’s products and services. Although the suit could take years to play out, here’s a closer look what it may eventually mean for iPhone users: If found liable, the company could be forced to change a number of things. One such change is how iPhone users could get greater access to “super apps” that have been largely restricted before. The term refers to one-stop-shop apps that allow for messaging, ordering food, payment processing and other capabilities all within one platform. According to Dipanjan Chatterjee, a principal analyst at market research firm Forrester, super apps most threaten Apple’s preeminence in the lives of its customers. “An offering like WeChat, dubbed China’s everything app, can provide an alternative to the Apple ecosystem for people to communicate, bank, share memories, talk to businesses and more,” he said. “What Apple fears most is becoming irrelevant to its customers.” At the same time, super apps like WeChat are created by larger companies and could, therefore, put some smaller companies at a disadvantage. And the concept hasn’t been welcomed much in the US anyway. The US government, however, could argue that lack of interest may be due to Apple’s high share of the smartphone market and its resistance to offer super apps in its store, Chatterjee said. Apple may also be required to offer more support for cross-platform messaging, an issue the company previously said it’s already working on. The company lets iPhone users send high-quality photos and videos to one another, but similar texts to Android phones are slower and grainy. It also maintains those messages in green bubbles, creating a kind of class divide, critics argue. In November, the company said it will add new features, such as read receipts, typing indicators, better support for group chats and higher quality media sharing of images and videos, across platforms to help close the gap. Apple’s move to add support for the standard called RCS (rich communication services) is intended to roll out later this year. RCS is considered the replacement to alternatives such as SMS, or short messaging service, and can work over both Wi-Fi and mobile data. The change followed pressure from both regulators and competitors to more seamlessly work across operating systems. The European Union’s Digital Markets Act, for example, requires companies to make their key services interoperable between platforms. The US government could require the same. Another likely change is how hardware from other companies, such as smartwatches, will interact with the Apple range of devices and software, including the iPhone and Apple’s services like Fitness+. The company has also required Apple Watch users to own iOS devices as a way to keep them locked into its existing ecosystem. Chatterjee said making this change would have both positives and negatives. “The net result would reside somewhere along the spectrum of access to more and cheaper options but also the devaluation of the customer experience that is so highly prized by Apple’s customers,” he said. The Biden administration has also taken issue with Apple’s lack of support for mobile cloud services. Loosening this could allow users to access games and other cloud-based apps without having to pay for pricey hardware. The DOJ lawsuit claims Apple’s behavior has illegally hindered competition, kept its customers locked into its products and prevented other companies from innovating. Although the Biden administration will have to prove these harms, some critics say any potential changes Apple could make will negatively impact the user experience. David McQueen, a research director at ABI Research, said he recognizes that the content and applications market should be open, and Apple needs to avoid monopolistic advantages that can restrict competition, push up prices or block innovation. But Apple’s success stems in part to its tight grip on its products and services, keeping things intuitive and seamless. “If Apple is forced to comply, it could potentially spell the end to the provision of this consistent and unified user experience, although by the same token, consumers will be open to a greater choice of apps and services, helping more developers and providers,” McQueen said. Chatterjee noted some people are drawn to the Apple family of products precisely because of the carefully managed ecosystem’s ease of use. Apple may have to work that much harder to preserve the integrity of its experience, but any changes probably won’t be enough to make customers to leave and go elsewhere. “The vast majority of Apple customers would probably be happier with some more choice and lower prices as long as it did not hamper their levels of customer experience, which is threatened by the less control Apple has over the experience,” Chatterjee said. But he added those currently outside of the Apple ecosystem will likely benefit by “plugging in opportunistically without having to go all in with Apple.”",CNN,26/03/2024,"['When Apple launched its first Mac computer in 1984, with its iconic Mac smiley-face “hello” greeting, it wanted to differentiate itself in the fledgling PC market.', 'The Mac was approachable with its friendly, innovative design – Apple’s way of setting the Mac apart in the confusing PC landscape.', 'That consumer-friendly mantra still exists today, with Apple carefully curating an easy-breezy yet controlled user experience across its products, including the billions of iPhones used around the world.', 'But the Biden administration believes Apple took that too far.', 'On Thursday, the Department of Justice sued Apple for illegally monopolizing the smartphone market.', 'In a press conference, the government provided a long list of how Apple has allegedly squashed competition with restrictive app store terms, high fees and its “walled-garden” approach, restricting how third-party companies interact with its brands and services.', 'The company denied the lawsuit’s allegations and said it plans to fight them.', 'Apple added that the lawsuit could empower the government “to take a heavy hand in designing people’s technology.”', 'But if successful, the lawsuit could ripple across Apple’s products and services.', 'Although the suit could take years to play out, here’s a closer look what it may eventually mean for iPhone users: If found liable, the company could be forced to change a number of things.', 'One such change is how iPhone users could get greater access to “super apps” that have been largely restricted before.', 'The term refers to one-stop-shop apps that allow for messaging, ordering food, payment processing and other capabilities all within one platform.', 'According to Dipanjan Chatterjee, a principal analyst at market research firm Forrester, super apps most threaten Apple’s preeminence in the lives of its customers.', '“An offering like WeChat, dubbed China’s everything app, can provide an alternative to the Apple ecosystem for people to communicate, bank, share memories, talk to businesses and more,” he said.', '“What Apple fears most is becoming irrelevant to its customers.”', 'At the same time, super apps like WeChat are created by larger companies and could, therefore, put some smaller companies at a disadvantage.', 'And the concept hasn’t been welcomed much in the US anyway.', 'The US government, however, could argue that lack of interest may be due to Apple’s high share of the smartphone market and its resistance to offer super apps in its store, Chatterjee said.', 'Apple may also be required to offer more support for cross-platform messaging, an issue the company previously said it’s already working on.', 'The company lets iPhone users send high-quality photos and videos to one another, but similar texts to Android phones are slower and grainy.', 'It also maintains those messages in green bubbles, creating a kind of class divide, critics argue.', 'In November, the company said it will add new features, such as read receipts, typing indicators, better support for group chats and higher quality media sharing of images and videos, across platforms to help close the gap.', 'Apple’s move to add support for the standard called RCS (rich communication services) is intended to roll out later this year.', 'RCS is considered the replacement to alternatives such as SMS, or short messaging service, and can work over both Wi-Fi and mobile data.', 'The change followed pressure from both regulators and competitors to more seamlessly work across operating systems.', 'The European Union’s Digital Markets Act, for example, requires companies to make their key services interoperable between platforms.', 'The US government could require the same.', 'Another likely change is how hardware from other companies, such as smartwatches, will interact with the Apple range of devices and software, including the iPhone and Apple’s services like Fitness+.', 'The company has also required Apple Watch users to own iOS devices as a way to keep them locked into its existing ecosystem.', 'Chatterjee said making this change would have both positives and negatives.', '“The net result would reside somewhere along the spectrum of access to more and cheaper options but also the devaluation of the customer experience that is so highly prized by Apple’s customers,” he said.', 'The Biden administration has also taken issue with Apple’s lack of support for mobile cloud services.', 'Loosening this could allow users to access games and other cloud-based apps without having to pay for pricey hardware.', 'The DOJ lawsuit claims Apple’s behavior has illegally hindered competition, kept its customers locked into its products and prevented other companies from innovating.', 'Although the Biden administration will have to prove these harms, some critics say any potential changes Apple could make will negatively impact the user experience.', 'David McQueen, a research director at ABI Research, said he recognizes that the content and applications market should be open, and Apple needs to avoid monopolistic advantages that can restrict competition, push up prices or block innovation.', 'But Apple’s success stems in part to its tight grip on its products and services, keeping things intuitive and seamless.', '“If Apple is forced to comply, it could potentially spell the end to the provision of this consistent and unified user experience, although by the same token, consumers will be open to a greater choice of apps and services, helping more developers and providers,” McQueen said.', 'Chatterjee noted some people are drawn to the Apple family of products precisely because of the carefully managed ecosystem’s ease of use.', 'Apple may have to work that much harder to preserve the integrity of its experience, but any changes probably won’t be enough to make customers to leave and go elsewhere.', '“The vast majority of Apple customers would probably be happier with some more choice and lower prices as long as it did not hamper their levels of customer experience, which is threatened by the less control Apple has over the experience,” Chatterjee said.', 'But he added those currently outside of the Apple ecosystem will likely benefit by “plugging in opportunistically without having to go all in with Apple.”']",0.2470050112228104,"In November, the company said it will add new features, such as read receipts, typing indicators, better support for group chats and higher quality media sharing of images and videos, across platforms to help close the gap.",The company denied the lawsuit’s allegations and said it plans to fight them.,-0.151834687590599,"“The vast majority of Apple customers would probably be happier with some more choice and lower prices as long as it did not hamper their levels of customer experience, which is threatened by the less control Apple has over the experience,” Chatterjee said.","The DOJ lawsuit claims Apple’s behavior has illegally hindered competition, kept its customers locked into its products and prevented other companies from innovating.",2024-05-19 From Taylor Swift tickets to gasoline — these days everyone feels like they’re being price-gouged. Are they?,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/18/business/price-gouging-explained/index.html," Published 4:00 AM EDT, Sat May 18, 2024 ","Emily Miller lucked out. Of the millions of fans — and bots — flooding Ticketmaster’s site in hopes of purchasing tickets to Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour, the 22-year-old managed to score $200 floor seats to see the mega pop star perform in Pittsburgh last summer. Now, Miller dreams of seeing Swift perform again when her tour returns to the US later this year. But despite entering 10 accounts to get a code that would give her the chance to buy tickets at face value through Ticketmaster’s presale, she was unsuccessful. On the resale market, nosebleed-seat tickets behind the stage are already listed for thousands of dollars. “People are taking advantage of fans and their vulnerability because people like me who have been fans of Taylor for so, so long would do genuinely anything just to be inside that stadium,” Miller, who is currently in an accelerated nursing degree program in Cleveland, told CNN. The resellers are price gouging the fans, she said. The term has been used a lot lately to describe so much more than just hiking gasoline prices during a hurricane. At the core of the increasingly common accusation of price gouging is the sense that the consumer is being exploited. But it’s not as cut and dry as you may think. In fact, economists — and even President Joe Biden — can’t agree on a definition of it. But there’s one thing everyone agrees on: Just about everything costs more than it used to a few years ago, a consequence of inflation. Although the pace of price increases has cooled substantially, we’re still paying more. It doesn’t help that prices can rise in seconds thanks to technology, unlike times when hikes would require, for instance, printing new menus. Consumers are taking to social media more to draw attention to times they feel like they are being ripped off. When, in effect, they may more likely be victims of inflation — or good old supply and demand. Gavin Roberts, chair of Weber State University’s economics department and who studies the effect of anti-price gouging laws, said the laws themselves often don’t define what price gouging is. Biden has been quite vocal about cracking down on price gouging, which he uses interchangeably with “corporate greed,” both of which he claims are a contributing factor to inflation. At the same time, Biden hasn’t defined what price gouging is and what it isn’t. A White House spokesperson declined to weigh in on that, and instead referred CNN to comments Biden made, including: “To any corporation that has not brought their prices back down — even as inflation has come down, even supply chains have been rebuilt — it’s time to stop the price gouging,” Biden said last year. Corporations charging as much as they can, as painful as it may be for consumers, doesn’t mean they’re necessarily price gouging, said Roberts. In Roberts’ view, price gouging occurs when there’s a scarcity of a good or service, lack of competition and the consumer has very little information about the price they’ll be charged or doesn’t have the ability to shop around for better prices. All that could lead them to be taken advantage of. The best example of this, he said, would be someone going to the emergency room in dire need of care and months later receiving a bill for thousands of dollars. It wouldn’t, in his view, be price gouging if a situation arose during which someone had the only attainable bottle of water and auctioned it off to a crowd of people for the highest possible price. That’s because people had upfront information about how the price was set, he said. Steven Suranovic, an economics professor at George Washington University who has also published research on price gouging, sees it differently. “I define it as the use of market power to secure a higher price than what would occur with free competition,” he said. “For example, Martin Shkreli was a price gouger when he set ridiculously high prices on some pharmaceutical drugs his company controlled.” When Shkreli was CEO of the company formerly known as Turing Pharmaceuticals, the price of the lifesaving drug Daraprim used by AIDS patients was raised from $13.50 a pill to $750 a pill, in 2015, sparking a public outcry. CNN reached out to Shkreli, who was later convicted of securities fraud and conspiracy, over LinkedIn. Shkreli responded to CNN in a message on LinkedIn: “we dont talk to snitches.” Waiting to order an Uber until you make your way to the lobby of a building could cost you 20% more than the price you saw when you first opened the app. That’s the essence of the Uber business model, a practice known as dynamic pricing where there is no fixed rate for how much your ride will cost. Rather, it is tied to the supply of drivers in a given area and the demand for rides. Uber, like its main competitor Lyft, has come under scrutiny for allowing prices to surge at times when public transit is severely disrupted. In some instances, the companies suspended surge pricing temporarily. (Neither company responded to requests for comment.) Surge pricing was in full effect, though, on New Year’s Eve of 2011 when Uber experienced what was then its highest demand in New York City, causing rides to spike above $100. That invited a slew of price gouging accusations. Travis Kalanick, the CEO at the time, later penned a blog post noting, “Nobody is required to take an Uber, but having a reliable option is what we’re shooting for. It’s not about gouging.” Suranovic said surge pricing can simply be a product of “a competitive market.” But he acknowledged that sudden price increases are more likely to lead consumers to believe they’re being price gouged and “blame business for profiteering.” “Higher costs due to inflation is a cause of gradual price increases, but I wouldn’t consider that gouging,” he told CNN. Experts in pricing strategy warn that surprise increases can generate a backlash. “Price gouging is a subjective emotion of a consumer feeling that they are being taken advantage of by an unfairly high price,” said Rafi Mohammed, who founded a pricing strategy consultancy firm called Culture of Profit. “When setting a price, managers need to understand and anticipate that their prices will elicit emotional reactions ranging from ‘that’s cheap’ to ‘this is unfair.’” To avoid that, his philosophy has been to set prices in a manner that could elicit a response from customers along the lines of “Thank you! I looked around at various offerings and determined that your product and price offered me the best value.” That said, if you do believe you’re being price gouged, your state may be able to step in — as many did during the pandemic, even for goods like toilet paper, by capping prices. (Though Roberts’ research suggests some anti-price gouging laws are to blame if you couldn’t find toilet paper.) Still, Teresa Murray, director of the consumer watchdog division of US PIRG, a nonprofit consumer advocacy research group, wrote in a blog post that “if you aren’t sure whether a product is priced too high, it’s better to report problematic items to the company and your attorney general.” Perhaps state attorneys general should consider a special division dedicated to Swifties, too.",CNN,18/05/2024,"['Emily Miller lucked out.', 'Of the millions of fans — and bots — flooding Ticketmaster’s site in hopes of purchasing tickets to Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour, the 22-year-old managed to score $200 floor seats to see the mega pop star perform in Pittsburgh last summer.', 'Now, Miller dreams of seeing Swift perform again when her tour returns to the US later this year.', 'But despite entering 10 accounts to get a code that would give her the chance to buy tickets at face value through Ticketmaster’s presale, she was unsuccessful.', 'On the resale market, nosebleed-seat tickets behind the stage are already listed for thousands of dollars.', '“People are taking advantage of fans and their vulnerability because people like me who have been fans of Taylor for so, so long would do genuinely anything just to be inside that stadium,” Miller, who is currently in an accelerated nursing degree program in Cleveland, told CNN.', 'The resellers are price gouging the fans, she said.', 'The term has been used a lot lately to describe so much more than just hiking gasoline prices during a hurricane.', 'At the core of the increasingly common accusation of price gouging is the sense that the consumer is being exploited.', 'But it’s not as cut and dry as you may think.', 'In fact, economists — and even President Joe Biden — can’t agree on a definition of it.', 'But there’s one thing everyone agrees on: Just about everything costs more than it used to a few years ago, a consequence of inflation.', 'Although the pace of price increases has cooled substantially, we’re still paying more.', 'It doesn’t help that prices can rise in seconds thanks to technology, unlike times when hikes would require, for instance, printing new menus.', 'Consumers are taking to social media more to draw attention to times they feel like they are being ripped off.', 'When, in effect, they may more likely be victims of inflation — or good old supply and demand.', 'Gavin Roberts, chair of Weber State University’s economics department and who studies the effect of anti-price gouging laws, said the laws themselves often don’t define what price gouging is.', 'Biden has been quite vocal about cracking down on price gouging, which he uses interchangeably with “corporate greed,” both of which he claims are a contributing factor to inflation.', 'At the same time, Biden hasn’t defined what price gouging is and what it isn’t.', 'A White House spokesperson declined to weigh in on that, and instead referred CNN to comments Biden made, including: “To any corporation that has not brought their prices back down — even as inflation has come down, even supply chains have been rebuilt — it’s time to stop the pricegouging,” Biden said last year.', 'Corporations charging as much as they can, as painful as it may be for consumers, doesn’t mean they’re necessarily price gouging, said Roberts.', 'In Roberts’ view, price gouging occurs when there’s a scarcity of a good or service, lack of competition and the consumer has very little information about the price they’ll be charged or doesn’t have the ability to shop around for better prices.', 'All that could lead them to be taken advantage of.', 'The best example of this, he said, would be someone going to the emergency room in dire need of care and months later receiving a bill for thousands of dollars.', 'It wouldn’t, in his view, be price gouging if a situation arose during which someone had the only attainable bottle of water and auctioned it off to a crowd of people for the highest possible price.', 'That’s because people had upfront information about how the price was set, he said.', 'Steven Suranovic, an economics professor at George Washington University who has also published research on price gouging, sees it differently.', '“I define it as the use of market power to secure a higher price than what would occur with free competition,” he said. “', 'For example, Martin Shkreli was a price gouger when he set ridiculously high prices on some pharmaceutical drugs his company controlled.”', 'When Shkreli was CEO of the company formerly known as Turing Pharmaceuticals, the price of the lifesaving drug Daraprim used by AIDS patients was raised from $13.50 a pill to $750 a pill, in 2015, sparking a public outcry.', 'CNN reached out to Shkreli, who was later convicted of securities fraud and conspiracy, over LinkedIn.', 'Shkreli responded to CNN in a message on LinkedIn: “we dont talk to snitches.”', 'Waiting to order an Uber until you make your way to the lobby of a building could cost you 20% more than the price you saw when you first opened the app.', 'That’s the essence of the Uber business model, a practice known as dynamic pricing where there is no fixed rate for how much your ride will cost.', 'Rather, it is tied to the supply of drivers in a given area and the demand for rides.', 'Uber, like its main competitor Lyft, has come under scrutiny for allowing prices to surge at times when public transit is severely disrupted.', 'In some instances, the companies suspended surge pricing temporarily. (', 'Neither company responded to requests for comment.)', 'Surge pricing was in full effect, though, on New Year’s Eve of 2011 when Uber experienced what was then its highest demand in New York City, causing rides to spike above $100.', 'That invited a slew of price gouging accusations.', 'Travis Kalanick, the CEO at the time, later penned a blog post noting, “Nobody is required to take an Uber, but having a reliable option is what we’re shooting for.', 'It’s not about gouging.”', 'Suranovic said surge pricing can simply be a product of “a competitive market.”', 'But he acknowledged that sudden price increases are more likely to lead consumers to believe they’re being price gouged and “blame business for profiteering.”', '“Higher costs due to inflation is a cause of gradual price increases, but I wouldn’t consider that gouging,” he told CNN.', 'Experts in pricing strategy warn that surprise increases can generate a backlash.', '“Price gouging is a subjective emotion of a consumer feeling that they are being taken advantage of by an unfairly high price,” said Rafi Mohammed, who founded a pricing strategy consultancy firm called Culture of Profit.', '“When setting a price, managers need to understand and anticipate that their prices will elicit emotional reactions ranging from ‘that’s cheap’ to ‘this is unfair.’”', 'To avoid that, his philosophy has been to set prices in a manner that could elicit a response from customers along the lines of “Thank you!', 'I looked around at various offerings and determined that your product and price offered me the best value.”', 'That said, if you do believe you’re being price gouged, your state may be able to step in — as many did during the pandemic, even for goods like toilet paper, by capping prices. (', 'Though Roberts’ research suggests some anti-price gouging laws are to blame if you couldn’t find toilet paper.)', 'Still, Teresa Murray, director of the consumer watchdog division of US PIRG, a nonprofit consumer advocacy research group, wrote in a blog post that “if you aren’t sure whether a product is priced too high, it’s better to report problematic items to the company and your attorney general.”', 'Perhaps state attorneys general should consider a special division dedicated to Swifties, too.']",0.0622957396396883,I looked around at various offerings and determined that your product and price offered me the best value.”,"CNN reached out to Shkreli, who was later convicted of securities fraud and conspiracy, over LinkedIn.",0.1651645741964641,"But there’s one thing everyone agrees on: Just about everything costs more than it used to a few years ago, a consequence of inflation.",Experts in pricing strategy warn that surprise increases can generate a backlash.,2024-05-19 NBC News ousts Ronna McDaniel after network’s anchors launch unprecedented on-air rebellion,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/26/media/nbc-news-ousts-ronna-mcdaniel/index.html," Updated 7:44 PM EDT, Tue March 26, 2024 ","NBC News on Tuesday ousted former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel, just days after her hiring as a paid political analyst sparked intense backlash from the network’s top television anchors over McDaniel’s role in subverting the 2020 election and attacks on the press. “There is no doubt that the last several days have been difficult for the News Group,” NBCUniversal News Group President Cesar Conde said in a memo to staff. “After listening to the legitimate concerns of many of you, I have decided that Ronna McDaniel will not be an NBC News contributor.” “I want to personally apologize to our team members who felt we let them down,” Conde continued. “While this was a collective recommendation by some members of our leadership team, I approved it and take full responsibility for it.” Ahead of the network’s decision, McDaniel spent the day Tuesday interviewing attorneys in preparation for a potential legal battle with NBC, a person familiar with the matter told CNN. Creative Artists Agency, the talent agency that brokered McDaniel’s deal with NBC, also parted ways with her, the person said. The reversal comes after journalists and anchors at both NBC and its cable news sibling MSNBC publicly denounced the decision to hire McDaniel as a paid analyst in a stunning and unprecedented on-air rebuke of network brass that has embarrassed the Peacock Network. McDaniel, who recently stepped down from the RNC under pressure from former President Donald Trump, was involved in attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 election. As head of the RNC, she was involved in a phone call in 2020 to pressure Michigan county officials not to certify the vote from the Detroit area, where Joe Biden had a commanding lead. McDaniel told the officials, regarding the certification: “Do not sign it. … We will get you attorneys.” In the years since, McDaniel continued to claim that the election had “problems” and that Biden did not legitimately win the election, fanning the flames of election denialism. NBC’s announcement Friday that it had hired McDaniel was quickly met with alarm by the network’s journalists. The revolt spilled into public view on Sunday when McDaniel appeared on “Meet the Press” with moderator Kristen Welker in her first interview since she was hired by the network. Welker disclosed that the interview had been scheduled to take place prior to NBC announcing McDaniel would become a paid contributor for the network, stating that she had no involvement in her hiring. Following the interview, Chuck Todd, NBC News’ chief political analyst, delivered a stinging on-air criticism of NBC executives for their decision to hire McDaniel, telling Welker, “I think our bosses owe you an apology for putting you in this situation.” “There’s a reason a lot of journalists at NBC News are uncomfortable with this,” Todd said, explaining that under McDaniel, the RNC engaged in “gaslighting” and “character assassination” when dealing with the news media. The following day, MSNBC hosts Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough joined Todd in protesting the decision on their program “Morning Joe.” “To be clear, we believe NBC News should seek out conservative Republican voices to provide balance in their election coverage, but it should be conservative Republicans, not a person who used her position of power to be an anti-democracy election denier,” Brzezinski said. “We hope NBC will reconsider its decision. It goes without saying that she will not be a guest on ‘Morning Joe’ in her capacity as a paid contributor.” Nicolle Wallace, host of MSNBC’s “Deadline: White House,” later joined in the rebuke, saying on her program that the network’s decision to hire McDaniel was nothing short of a potential threat to democracy. “NBC News is, either wittingly or unwittingly, teaching election deniers that what they can do stretches well beyond appearing on our air and interviews to peddle lies about the sanctity and integrity of our elections,” Wallace told viewers. Rachel Maddow — the network’s biggest star — later devoted the first half-hour of her prime-time program to the controversy, saying the decision to hire McDaniel was “inexplicable.” Maddow took issue with McDaniel’s long track record of demonizing the news media, labeling the press as “fake news,” and launching ugly attacks on NBC News journalists and MSNBC hosts. “We do not take it personally when we get attacked, when they say they want to put us on trial and execute us for treason,” she said. “And so I want to associate myself with all my colleagues at MSNBC and NBC News who have voiced loud and principled objections to our company for putting on the payroll someone who hasn’t just attacked us as journalists, but someone who is part of an ongoing project to get rid of our system of government,” she said of McDaniel. “Someone who is still trying to convince Americans that this election stuff doesn’t really work. That this last election wasn’t a real result. That American elections are fraudulent.“ The on-air revolt ensnared NBC’s top leaders, including NBCUniversal News Group chair Cesar Conde, NBC News president Rebecca Blumenstein and senior vice president of politics Carrie Budoff Brown, who were responsible for McDaniel’s hiring. MSNBC president Rashida Jones also did not object to the decision, people familiar with the matter said. In the wake of Conde’s announcement to sever ties with McDaniel, MSNBC host Joy Reid and Maddow addressed the reversal on the network’s air, praising the move as “bold” and “strong.” “I think it is a show of strength and a show of respect for the people who work at this company and make us who we are,” Maddow said. “That leadership was willing to change on this, I’m grateful to them.”",CNN,26/03/2024,"['NBC News on Tuesday ousted former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel, just days after her hiring as a paid political analyst sparked intense backlash from the network’s top television anchors over McDaniel’s role in subverting the 2020 election and attacks on the press.', '“There is no doubt that the last several days have been difficult for the News Group,” NBCUniversal News Group President Cesar Conde said in a memo to staff. “', 'After listening to the legitimate concerns of many of you, I have decided that Ronna McDaniel will not be an NBC News contributor.”', '“I want to personally apologize to our team members who felt we let them down,” Conde continued. “', 'While this was a collective recommendation by some members of our leadership team, I approved it and take full responsibility for it.”', 'Ahead of the network’s decision, McDaniel spent the day Tuesday interviewing attorneys in preparation for a potential legal battle with NBC, a person familiar with the matter told CNN.', 'Creative Artists Agency, the talent agency that brokered McDaniel’s deal with NBC, also parted ways with her, the person said.', 'The reversal comes after journalists and anchors at both NBC and its cable news sibling MSNBC publicly denounced the decision to hire McDaniel as a paid analyst in a stunning and unprecedented on-air rebuke of network brass that has embarrassed the Peacock Network.', 'McDaniel, who recently stepped down from the RNC under pressure from former President Donald Trump, was involved in attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 election.', 'As head of the RNC, she was involved in a phone call in 2020 to pressure Michigan county officials not to certify the vote from the Detroit area, where Joe Biden had a commanding lead.', 'McDanieltold the officials, regarding the certification: “Do not sign it. …', 'We will get you attorneys.”', 'In the years since, McDaniel continued to claim that the election had “problems” and that Biden did not legitimately win the election, fanning the flames of election denialism.', 'NBC’s announcement Friday that it had hired McDaniel was quickly met with alarm by the network’s journalists.', 'The revolt spilled into public view on Sunday when McDaniel appeared on “Meet the Press” with moderator Kristen Welker in her first interview since she was hired by the network.', 'Welker disclosed that the interview had been scheduled to take place prior to NBC announcing McDaniel would become a paid contributor for the network, stating that she had no involvement in her hiring.', 'Following the interview, Chuck Todd, NBC News’ chief political analyst, delivered a stinging on-air criticism of NBC executives for their decision to hire McDaniel, telling Welker, “I think our bosses owe you an apology for putting you in this situation.”', '“There’s a reason a lot of journalists at NBC News are uncomfortable with this,” Todd said, explaining that under McDaniel, the RNC engaged in “gaslighting” and “character assassination” when dealing with the news media.', 'The following day, MSNBC hosts Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough joined Todd in protesting the decision on their program “Morning Joe.”', '“To be clear, we believe NBC News should seek out conservative Republican voices to provide balance in their election coverage, but it should be conservative Republicans, not a person who used her position of power to be an anti-democracy election denier,”Brzezinski said. “', 'We hope NBC will reconsider its decision.', 'It goes without saying that she will not be a guest on ‘Morning Joe’ in her capacity as a paid contributor.”', 'Nicolle Wallace, host of MSNBC’s “Deadline: White House,” later joined in the rebuke, saying on her program that the network’s decision to hire McDaniel was nothing short of a potential threat to democracy.', '“NBC News is, either wittingly or unwittingly, teaching election deniers that what they can do stretches well beyond appearing on our air and interviews to peddle lies about the sanctity and integrity of our elections,” Wallace told viewers.', 'Rachel Maddow — the network’s biggest star — later devoted the first half-hour of her prime-time program to the controversy, saying the decision to hire McDaniel was “inexplicable.”', 'Maddow took issue with McDaniel’s long track record of demonizing the news media, labeling the press as “fake news,” and launching ugly attacks on NBC News journalists and MSNBC hosts.', '“We do not take it personally when we get attacked, when they say they want to put us on trial and execute us for treason,” she said.', '“And so I want to associate myself with all my colleagues at MSNBC and NBC News who have voiced loud and principled objections to our company for putting on the payroll someone who hasn’t just attacked us as journalists, but someone who is part of an ongoing project to get rid of our system of government,” she said of McDaniel. “', 'Someone who is still trying to convince Americans that this election stuff doesn’t really work.', 'That this last election wasn’t a real result.', 'That American elections are fraudulent.“', 'The on-air revolt ensnared NBC’s top leaders, including NBCUniversal News Group chair Cesar Conde, NBC News president Rebecca Blumenstein and senior vice president of politics Carrie Budoff Brown, who were responsible for McDaniel’s hiring.', 'MSNBC president Rashida Jones also did not object to the decision, people familiar with the matter said.', 'In the wake of Conde’s announcement to sever ties with McDaniel, MSNBC host Joy Reid and Maddow addressed the reversal on the network’s air, praising the move as “bold” and “strong.”', '“I think it is a show of strength and a show of respect for the people who work at this company and make us who we are,” Maddow said. “', 'That leadership was willing to change on this, I’m grateful to them.”']",-0.0710578434549836,"In the wake of Conde’s announcement to sever ties with McDaniel, MSNBC host Joy Reid and Maddow addressed the reversal on the network’s air, praising the move as “bold” and “strong.”","Maddow took issue with McDaniel’s long track record of demonizing the news media, labeling the press as “fake news,” and launching ugly attacks on NBC News journalists and MSNBC hosts.",-0.4204912036657333,"In the wake of Conde’s announcement to sever ties with McDaniel, MSNBC host Joy Reid and Maddow addressed the reversal on the network’s air, praising the move as “bold” and “strong.”",The reversal comes after journalists and anchors at both NBC and its cable news sibling MSNBC publicly denounced the decision to hire McDaniel as a paid analyst in a stunning and unprecedented on-air rebuke of network brass that has embarrassed the Peacock Network.,2024-05-19 Elon Musk’s Neuralink is seeking a second person to test its brain chip,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/17/tech/neuralink-trial-participant-elon-musk-noland-arbaugh/index.html," Published 11:45 AM EDT, Fri May 17, 2024 ","Elon Musk’s brain implant startup Neuralink is accepting applications for a second human trial participant to test its device, the billionaire said on X Friday. The request comes five months after Neuralink implanted a brain chip into its first human trial participant, 30-year-old Noland Arbaugh, and just a week after the company admitted that his implant had experienced an unexpected problem. Neuralink said that the threads connecting the chip to Arbaugh’s brain had retracted, causing performance issues, although the company said it made adjustments to improve its function. Still, Arbaugh says the implant — which allows him to control a computer cursor with his brain — has changed his life. Arbaugh has been a quadriplegic since 2016 following a diving accident. “I didn’t have anything to wake up for in the morning, and this has changed that for me,” Arbaugh told Good Morning America in an interview that aired on Friday. “I was just very happy that I would be a part of something that I believe is so monumental. This is the next step forward of helping people with paralysis.” Now, Neuralink is seeking more people like Arbaugh to test out its brain chip. “If you have quadriplegia and want to explore new ways of controlling your computer, we invite you to participate in our clinical trial,” the company said on X. Ultimately, Neuralink’s ambition is to use implants to connect human brains to computers to help, for example, paralyzed people to control smartphones or computers or blind people to regain sight. Like existing brain-machine interfaces, the company’s implant would collect electrical signals sent out by the brain and interpret them as actions. The current trial participants will be part of what Neuralink is calling its PRIME Study, short for Precise Robotically Implanted Brain-Computer Interface. The intent is to study the safety of its implant and surgical robot and to test the functionality of its device, the company said in a 2023 blog post. The company says it is enrolling trial patients who have “limited or no ability to use both hands due to cervical spinal cord injury or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).” Trial patients have chips surgically placed in the part of the brain that controls the intention to move. The chip then records and sends brain signals to an app, with the initial goal being “to grant people the ability to control a computer cursor or keyboard using their thoughts alone,” Neuralink previously explained. About a month after the operation, Musk said Arbaugh could control a computer mouse with his brain. Neuralink later posted a video showing Arbaugh using only his brain to play chess on a computer. But after his device developed an unexpected issue stunting its data processing speeds and performance, Arbaugh told Good Morning America that he “cried afterwards.” “It was very, very hard to give up all of the amazing things that I was able to do,” he said. However, Neuralink says the issue was part of its learning process. “The reason we do clinical trials and early feasibility trials is to uncover these sorts of issues as early as possible before they get marketed,” DJ Seo, who co-founded Neuralink with Musk, told Good Morning America. “We rolled up our sleeves and found various different ways for Noland to be able to recover his performance, which we have successfully been able to do.” Consumers will not have widespread access to the technology anytime soon. Before Neuralink’s brain implants hit the broader market, they’ll need broader regulatory approval. –CNN’s Jordan Valinsky contributed to this report.",CNN,17/05/2024,"['Elon Musk’s brain implant startup Neuralink is accepting applications for a second human trial participant to test its device, the billionaire said on X Friday.', 'The request comes five months after Neuralink implanted a brain chip into its first human trial participant, 30-year-old Noland Arbaugh, and just a week after the company admitted that his implant had experienced an unexpected problem.', 'Neuralink said that the threads connecting the chip to Arbaugh’s brain had retracted, causing performance issues, although the company said it made adjustments to improve its function.', 'Still, Arbaugh says the implant — which allows him to control a computer cursor with his brain — has changed his life.', 'Arbaugh has been a quadriplegic since 2016 following a diving accident.', '“I didn’t have anything to wake up for in the morning, and this has changed that for me,” Arbaugh told Good Morning America in an interview that aired on Friday. “', 'I was just very happy that I would be a part of something that I believe is so monumental.', 'This is the next step forward of helping people with paralysis.”', 'Now, Neuralink is seeking more people like Arbaugh to test out its brain chip. “', 'If you have quadriplegia and want to explore new ways of controlling your computer, we invite you to participate in our clinical trial,” the company said on X. Ultimately, Neuralink’s ambitionis to useimplants to connect human brains to computers to help, for example, paralyzed people to control smartphones or computers or blind people to regain sight.', 'Like existing brain-machine interfaces, the company’s implant would collect electrical signals sent out by the brain and interpret them as actions.', 'The current trial participants will be part of what Neuralink is calling its PRIME Study, short for PreciseRoboticallyImplanted Brain-Computer Interface.', 'The intent is to study the safety of its implant and surgical robot and to test the functionality of its device, the company said in a 2023blog post.', 'The company says it is enrolling trial patients who have “limited or no ability to use both hands due to cervical spinal cord injury or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).”', 'Trial patients have chips surgically placed in the part of the brain that controls the intention to move.', 'The chip then records and sends brain signals to an app, with the initial goal being “to grant people the ability to control a computer cursor or keyboard using their thoughts alone,” Neuralink previously explained.', 'About a month after the operation, Musk said Arbaugh could control a computer mouse with his brain.', 'Neuralink later posted a video showing Arbaugh using only his brain to play chess on a computer.', 'But after his device developed an unexpected issue stunting its data processing speeds and performance, Arbaugh told Good Morning America that he “cried afterwards.”', '“It was very, very hard to give up all of the amazing things that I was able to do,” he said.', 'However, Neuralink says the issue was part of its learning process.', '“The reason we do clinical trials and early feasibility trials is to uncover these sorts of issues as early as possible before they get marketed,”DJ Seo, who co-founded Neuralink withMusk, told Good Morning America. “', 'We rolled up our sleeves and found various different ways for Noland to be able to recover his performance, which we have successfully been able to do.”', 'Consumers will not have widespread access to the technology anytime soon.', 'Before Neuralink’s brain implants hit the broader market, they’ll need broader regulatory approval.', '–CNN’s Jordan Valinsky contributed to this report.']",0.192958019884596,I was just very happy that I would be a part of something that I believe is so monumental.,The company says it is enrolling trial patients who have “limited or no ability to use both hands due to cervical spinal cord injury or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).”,0.1365916984421866,"We rolled up our sleeves and found various different ways for Noland to be able to recover his performance, which we have successfully been able to do.”","Neuralink said that the threads connecting the chip to Arbaugh’s brain had retracted, causing performance issues, although the company said it made adjustments to improve its function.",2024-05-19 OpenAI’s wild week. How the Sam Altman story unfolded,https://edition.cnn.com/2023/11/22/tech/openai-sam-altman-chaos-explained-intl-hnk/index.html," Updated 3:32 PM EST, Wed November 22, 2023 ","In a year of wild tech stories that has seen Elon Musk transform Twitter, cryptocurrency exchange FTX collapse and Silicon Valley Bank implode, this week’s whiplash-inducing turmoil at OpenAI is among the most captivating. Sam Altman — the leader of one of the world’s most influential AI companies, OpenAI, and perhaps the most visible figure in the fledgling industry — was fired Friday night by the startup’s directors in a surprise move. Less than five days later, he’s back as the company’s CEO, now with a board that is, in theory, more supportive of his vision. The series of extraordinary events unfolded just days after OpenAI held its first-ever developer conference, where it laid out new, commercialized versions of its technology, including the option to customize its ChatGPT AI chatbot. If you’re just catching up, here’s what you missed from a week so incredible you’d be forgiven for thinking the script could have been written by an early version of OpenAI’s ChatGPT. Around 3 p.m. ET, Altman joined a Google Meet call with most of OpenAI’s board that had been convened by fellow co-founder and OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, during which Altman was fired and told that the news would soon be made public. Within the next half hour, the board also informed Greg Brockman, another co-founder and OpenAI president, that he would be removed from the board. Around 3:30 p.m. ET, OpenAI publicly announced that it had fired Altman over concerns that he was not always truthful with the board. The board said Mira Murati, the company’s chief technology officer, would become interim CEO. OpenAI’s strategic partners, including its biggest financial backer Microsoft, were also reportedly informed of Altman’s ouster just minutes before the board’s announcement. Hours after being fired, Altman posted on X that he “loved working with such talented people” and that he would have “more to say about what’s next later.” Brockman promptly quit. “Please don’t spend any time being concerned. We will be fine,” Brockman said in a Friday post on X. “Greater things coming soon.” A key factor in the CEO’s firing was tension between Altman, who favored developing AI more aggressively, and members of the OpenAI board, who wanted to move more cautiously, according to CNN contributor Kara Swisher, who spoke to sources knowledgeable about the unfolding events. Within 24 hours of Altman being fired, reports emerged that he and other ex-OpenAI loyalists were mulling plans for their own venture. OpenAI’s board was also reportedly having second thoughts and considering asking the ousted CEO to return. By Sunday afternoon, Altman was back at OpenAI’s headquarters — this time with a guest badge — to negotiate his potential return. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella reportedly mediated the discussion. A 5 p.m. PT deadline was reportedly set for the board to agree to Altman’s demands, including adding a seat for Microsoft, and reinstating him as CEO. But those talks broke down. As Sunday turned into Monday, Nadella tweeted that Altman, along with Brockman, would join Microsoft to run a new AI research group. At OpenAI, the group found a new interim CEO: Emmett Shear, the former CEO of Amazon’s streaming service, Twitch. Murati would return to her role as OpenAI’s chief technology officer. In a post on X early Monday, Shear, who left his role at Twitch in March, described the chance to join OpenAI as “a once-in-a-lifetime” opportunity. He added that the company would hire an independent investigator to report on what happened in the lead-up to Altman’s firing. But OpenAI employees were not convinced. More than 500 staffers signed an open letter calling on the company’s board to resign and reinstate Altman and Brockman. They also threatened to follow the co-founders to Microsoft if their demands were not met. Altman posted on X, saying, “we have more unity and commitment and focus than ever before. we are all going to work together some way or other, and i’m so excited. one team, one mission.” The drama was far from over. The Verge reported Monday afternoon that Altman and Brockman could still return to OpenAI if the board members who fired him resign. And Nadella, speaking to CNBC, said he was “open to both options” when asked whether Altman would actually join Microsoft. “Look, that is for the OpenAI board and management and the employees to choose,” Nadella said. “We chose to explicitly partner with OpenAI and we want to continue to do so, and obviously, that depends on the people of OpenAI staying there or coming to Microsoft.” Altman was reinstated late Tuesday as OpenAI’s CEO, the company said on X. “We have reached an agreement in principle for Sam Altman to return to OpenAI as CEO with a new initial board,” the company said, adding that the board will be chaired by Bret Taylor, a former co-CEO of Salesforce. Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers will also join the board, alongside existing director, Quora CEO Adam D’Angelo. “We are collaborating to figure out the details,” it said. In his own post on X, formerly Twitter, Altman wrote that he is “looking forward” to returning to OpenAI and building on the firm’s “strong partnership” with Microsoft. It’s unclear how Shear will be affected by Altman’s return. Posting on X, Shear wrote: “I am deeply pleased by this result, after (some) 72 very intense hours of work … I’m glad to have been a part of the solution.” Brockman is also returning to OpenAI, according to his post on X. Ultimately, Microsoft and Altman appear to be the big winners from the dust-up: Altman will continue leading the firm he helped to found. And Microsoft has wrested more control over the company it has backed with billions to bolster its ambitions in developing AI. “We are encouraged by the changes to the OpenAI board,” Nadella said on X. “We believe this is a first essential step on a path to more stable, well-informed, and effective governance.”",CNN,22/11/2023,"['In a year of wild tech stories that has seen Elon Musk transform Twitter, cryptocurrency exchange FTX collapse and Silicon Valley Bank implode, this week’s whiplash-inducing turmoil at OpenAI is among the most captivating.', 'Sam Altman — the leader of one of the world’s most influential AI companies, OpenAI, and perhaps themost visible figure in the fledgling industry — was fired Friday night by the startup’s directors in a surprise move.', 'Less than five days later, he’s back as the company’s CEO, now with a board that is, in theory, more supportive of his vision.', 'The series of extraordinary events unfolded just days after OpenAI held itsfirst-ever developer conference, where it laid out new, commercialized versions of its technology, including the option to customize its ChatGPT AI chatbot.', 'If you’re just catching up, here’s what you missed from a week so incredible you’d be forgiven for thinking the script could have been written by an early version of OpenAI’s ChatGPT.', 'Around 3 p.m. ET, Altman joined a Google Meet call with most of OpenAI’s board that had been convened by fellow co-founder and OpenAI chief scientistIlya Sutskever, during which Altman was fired and told that the news would soon be made public.', 'Within the next half hour, the board also informed Greg Brockman, another co-founder and OpenAI president, that he would be removed from the board.', 'Around 3:30 p.m. ET, OpenAI publicly announced that it had fired Altman over concerns that he was not always truthful with the board.', 'The board said Mira Murati, the company’s chief technology officer, would become interim CEO.', 'OpenAI’s strategic partners, including its biggest financial backer Microsoft, were also reportedly informed of Altman’s ouster just minutes before the board’s announcement.', 'Hours after being fired, Altman posted on X that he “loved working with such talented people” and that he would have “more to say about what’s next later.”', 'Brockman promptly quit. “', 'Please don’t spend any time being concerned.', 'We will be fine,” Brockmansaid in a Friday poston X. “Greater things coming soon.”', 'A key factor in the CEO’s firing wastension between Altman, who favored developing AImore aggressively, and members of the OpenAI board, who wanted to move more cautiously,according to CNN contributor Kara Swisher,who spoke to sources knowledgeable about the unfolding events.', 'Within 24 hours of Altman being fired, reports emerged that he and other ex-OpenAI loyalists were mulling plans for their own venture.', 'OpenAI’s board was also reportedly having second thoughts and considering asking the ousted CEO to return.', 'By Sunday afternoon, Altman wasback at OpenAI’s headquarters— this time with a guest badge — to negotiate his potential return.', 'Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella reportedly mediated the discussion.', 'A 5 p.m. PT deadline was reportedly set for the board to agree to Altman’s demands, including adding a seat for Microsoft, and reinstating him as CEO.', 'But those talks broke down.', 'As Sunday turned into Monday, Nadella tweeted that Altman, along with Brockman, would join Microsoft to run a new AI research group.', 'At OpenAI, the group found a new interim CEO: Emmett Shear, the former CEO of Amazon’s streaming service, Twitch.', 'Murati would return to her role as OpenAI’s chief technology officer.', 'In a post on X early Monday, Shear, who left his role at Twitch in March, described the chance to join OpenAI as “a once-in-a-lifetime” opportunity.', 'He added that the company would hire an independent investigator to report on what happened in the lead-up to Altman’s firing.', 'But OpenAI employees were not convinced.', 'More than 500 staffers signed an open letter calling on the company’s board to resign and reinstate Altman and Brockman.', 'They also threatened to follow the co-founders to Microsoft if their demands were not met.', 'Altman posted on X, saying, “we have more unity and commitment and focus than ever before.', 'we are all going to work together some way or other, and i’m so excited.', 'one team, one mission.”', 'The drama was far from over.', 'The Verge reported Monday afternoonthat Altman and Brockman could still return to OpenAI if the board members who fired him resign.', 'And Nadella, speaking to CNBC, said he was “open to both options” when asked whether Altman would actually join Microsoft.', '“Look, that is for the OpenAI board and management and the employees to choose,” Nadella said. “', 'We chose to explicitly partner with OpenAI and we want to continue to do so, and obviously, that depends on the people of OpenAI staying there or coming to Microsoft.”', 'Altmanwas reinstated late Tuesday as OpenAI’s CEO, the company said on X. “We have reached an agreement in principle for Sam Altman to return to OpenAI as CEO with a new initial board,” the company said, adding that the board will be chaired by Bret Taylor, a former co-CEO of Salesforce.', 'Former Treasury SecretaryLarry Summers will also join the board, alongside existing director, Quora CEOAdam D’Angelo.', '“We are collaborating to figure out the details,” it said.', 'In his own post on X, formerly Twitter, Altmanwrotethat he is “looking forward” to returning to OpenAI and building on the firm’s “strong partnership” with Microsoft.', 'It’s unclear how Shear will be affected by Altman’s return.', 'Posting on X, Shear wrote:“I am deeply pleased by this result, after (some) 72 very intense hours of work … I’m glad to have been a part of the solution.”', 'Brockman is also returning to OpenAI, according to hispost on X. Ultimately, Microsoft and Altman appear to be the big winners from the dust-up: Altman will continue leading the firm he helped to found.', 'And Microsoft has wrested more control over the company it has backed with billions to bolster its ambitions in developing AI.', '“We are encouraged by the changes to the OpenAI board,” Nadellasaidon X. “We believe this is a first essential step on a path to more stable, well-informed, and effective governance.”']",0.062777217389235,"“We are encouraged by the changes to the OpenAI board,” Nadellasaidon X. “We believe this is a first essential step on a path to more stable, well-informed, and effective governance.”","Around 3:30 p.m. ET, OpenAI publicly announced that it had fired Altman over concerns that he was not always truthful with the board.",0.549453833273479,And Microsoft has wrested more control over the company it has backed with billions to bolster its ambitions in developing AI.,"Sam Altman — the leader of one of the world’s most influential AI companies, OpenAI, and perhaps themost visible figure in the fledgling industry — was fired Friday night by the startup’s directors in a surprise move.",2024-05-19 Under Armour was a real threat to Nike. Now it’s fighting to stay relevant,https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/18/business/under-armour-kevin-plank-shoes/index.html," Published 10:00 AM EDT, Sat May 18, 2024 ","It was once hyped as a worthy rival to Nike. But at present, Under Armour, founded by a 23-year-old former college athlete, is struggling to “just do it.” Instead, the brand that’s championed on the basketball court by Stephen Curry and on the golf course by Jordan Spieth, is now struggling — badly — to find its footing in an increasingly competitive and crowded sportwear marketplace for regular folks, where younger shoppers are more googly-eyed over newer entrants like Hoka and On running shoes. Under Armour’s annual sales have been sluggish at best for the past several years, while its stock has plunged 88% from its all-time high in 2015. Industry experts said the company is mired in an unpleasant mix of problems, which include an identity crisis, several management controversies, ignoring evolving market trends to its detriment, and a rotating carousel of CEOs in quick succession. One of them is Kevin Plank, its founder, who is back at the helm for a second time as CEO after being replaced in 2019. Similar to Starbucks founder Howard Schultz’s past returns to Starbucks and Disney chief Bob Iger’s recent return as CEO, Plank aims to right the ship at Under Armour. “When Under Armour was growing at 20% plus numbers, people saw it as a legitimate competitor to Nike,” said David Swartz, senior equity analyst with research firm Morningstar, in an interview with CNN. “It was like On or Hoka but 10 years ago. It was the upstart athletic brand that was making real inroads against Nike, the dominant name in the industry. People saw it as a company that actually could break through and take market share from Nike among the hardcore athletes,” Swartz said. “That actually did happen for a while, but then that didn’t last.” Plank launched Under Armour in 1996 to be what the name suggests — a protective layer of clothing worn by competitive athletes sweating it out in the heat of the game. The first product was a fitted T-shirt called “The Shorty,” made from moisture-wicking fabric for elite athletes to wear under their uniforms to keep them dry. Its iconic Under Armour intertwined “U” and “A” logo was strategically placed on the neckline, to keep it conspicuous. The T-shirt eventually launched the brand to the masses after it quickly gained fandom among the ranks of professional athletes. The startup’s fast track to success led to Under Armour going public in 2005. It’s early slogan: “Protect This House.” By 2010, the business had crossed $1 billion in sales. Five years later, sales surpassed $4 billion. But then the momentum started to wane. The past eight years for Under Armour have been a struggle that doesn’t appear to be abating. The company on Thursday announced a restructuring of its business as its North America sales in its most recent quarter tumbled 10%. Looking ahead, the company cast a dour forecast for its current fiscal year, expecting sales to drop 15% to 17%. Layoffs will be part of the effort to right the ship but executives did not specify how many employees will lose their jobs. Under Armour also announced a $500 million share buyback, a move to reward shareholders. Plank told analysts during the earnings call on Thursday that he will shepherd a reset of the business that centers on selling fewer but more innovative products to meet the needs of athletes, significantly accelerating product development, refocusing on its men’s apparel category and reducing discounts of its products. “We are simply doing too much stuff. There are too many products, too many initiatives. To reconstitute this brand, we must be highly focused and prioritize what needs to get done so that our teams know exactly what to do with a clear definition of success for them,” Plank said. It can’t be ignored that management issues, too, have plagued the business for years, Swartz said. “The company has essentially had five CEOs in the past five years, if you count Kevin Plank twice,” said Swartz. Plank was announced as CEO — again — in March, ending the very brief year-long tenure of Stephanie Linnartz. Plank conceded during the analysts call Thursday that frequent C-suite turnover had become a serious impediment to success. “With several CEOs and heads of product, marketing in North America over the past half-decade, ongoing turnover of critical leadership has been central to our inability to stay agile and decisive,” he said. The period from 2016 onward is when “things really started to fall apart” at Under Armour, Swartz said. A huge issue arose when an important channel of distribution for the brand went bankrupt and closed stores. A bulk of Under Armour products are sold through sporting goods retailers and department stores, including Macy’s and Kohl’s, and online. “When Sports Authority went bankrupt in 2016 it really hurt Under Armour. It was a major customer of the brand, as is Dick’s Sporting Goods,” Schwartz said. In 2020, UCLA sued Under Armour for ending a $280 million sponsorship deal. The suit alleged that Under Armour was struggling before Covid-19 and that it used the pandemic as a reason to get out of the deal. The 15-year sponsorship deal, signed in 2016, was the largest in the history of college sports at the time. In exchange for the $280 million, UCLA’s student athletes and personnel would wear and use Under Armour (UA)-supplied products exclusively. The company reached a settlement with UCLA. The following year, Under Armour paid $9 million to settle a multi-year investigation with the US Securities and Exchange Commission into its past accounting practices, according to Footwear News. Outside of other bad press for Plank, competitors were gaining ground on Under Armour, whose high-performance sportwear offerings weren’t best suited for the Lululemon-driven athleisure trend that had emerged and then dominated the way consumers dressed through the pandemic. “Under Armour has failed to latch upon streetwear, or sports style that catapulted On or Hoka or Merrell,” said Zak Stambor, senior analyst, retail and ecommerce, with market research firm eMarketer, in an interview with CNN. “It needs to figure out what is next. If it can’t do that, then it needs to quickly latch upon what another brand has identified as the next big thing.” Stambor questioned Plank’s decision to pull back from discounts at a time when consumers are hyper focused on value. “It carries the risk of decreasing demand particularly when you don’t have a must-have product,” he said. Stambor said this decision also stands in stark contrast to a recent move that rival Adidas has made to roll out cheaper versions of their must-have shoes. Despite it’s significant challenges, Stambor said Under Armour can remain relevant in the market. “It is a very large company with huge revenue. It’s not as though the brand has fully diminished in standing. It’s a bit stuck,” he said. “Under Armour needs to identify what it is that consumers want and lean heavily in that direction. It hasn’t fully shown an ability to do so over the past few years,” he said. One area that’s going strong is the brand’s long-term celebrity-brand partnerships, said Eric Smallwood, president of Apex Marketing Group, a sports and entertainment firm that evaluates sponsorships and advertising campaigns. “Under Armour’s relationship with the ‘The Rock’, Dwayne Johnson, has been pretty effective. They’ve expanded to the United Football League, which is the football league that Johnson co-owns,” Smallwood said. “Their uniforms are Under Armour.” Golf is another area where the brand is making inroads while the Stephen Curry partnership has kept the brand visible in the basketball world, Smallwood said. The basketball superstar Curry, arguably the best shooter in history, famously signed with Under Armour instead of Nike in 2013. Meanwhile, the brand’s other major NBA star, Joel Embiid, quit Under Armour in 2023 a few months after he was named the league’s most valuable player. Embiid signed a shoe deal with Skechers last month. Under Armour reportedly bid hard for a shoe deal with WNBA phenom Caitlin Clark, who many expect will sign with Nike. “The bottomline for Under Armour is for the brand to be clear about its identity,” he said. “Are they a shoe company? Are they an apparel company? At one point everyone else copied their mositure-wicking undershirt. Then maybe they had an identity crisis. It’s going to come down to deciding if they want to evolve into a lifestyle brand or stay in performance-based products.”",CNN,18/05/2024,"['It was once hyped as a worthy rival to Nike.', 'But at present, Under Armour, founded by a 23-year-old former college athlete, is struggling to “just do it.”', 'Instead, the brand that’s championed on the basketball court by Stephen Curry and on the golf course by Jordan Spieth, is now struggling — badly — to find its footing in an increasingly competitive and crowded sportwear marketplace for regular folks, where younger shoppers are more googly-eyed over newer entrants like Hoka and On running shoes.', 'Under Armour’s annual sales have been sluggish at best for the past several years, while its stock has plunged 88% from its all-time high in 2015.', 'Industry experts said the company is mired in an unpleasant mix of problems, which include an identity crisis, several management controversies, ignoring evolving market trends to its detriment, and a rotating carousel of CEOs in quick succession.', 'One of them is Kevin Plank, its founder, who is back at the helm for a second time as CEO after being replaced in 2019.', 'Similar to Starbucks founder Howard Schultz’s past returns to Starbucks and Disney chief Bob Iger’s recent return as CEO, Plank aims to right the ship at Under Armour.', '“When Under Armour was growing at 20% plus numbers, people saw it as a legitimate competitor to Nike,” said David Swartz, senior equity analyst with research firm Morningstar, in an interview with CNN.', '“It was like On or Hoka but 10 years ago.', 'It was the upstart athletic brand that was making real inroads against Nike, the dominant name in the industry.', 'People saw it as a company that actually could break through and take market share from Nike among the hardcore athletes,” Swartz said. “', 'That actually did happen for a while, but then that didn’t last.”', 'Plank launched Under Armour in 1996 to be what the name suggests — a protective layer of clothing worn by competitive athletes sweating it out in the heat of the game.', 'The first product was a fitted T-shirt called “The Shorty,” made from moisture-wicking fabric for elite athletes to wear under their uniforms to keep them dry.', 'Its iconic Under Armour intertwined “U” and “A” logo was strategically placed on the neckline, to keep it conspicuous.', 'The T-shirt eventually launched the brand to the masses after it quickly gained fandom among the ranks of professional athletes.', 'The startup’s fast track to success led to Under Armour going public in 2005.', 'It’s early slogan: “Protect This House.”', 'By 2010, the business had crossed $1 billion in sales.', 'Five years later, sales surpassed $4 billion.', 'But then the momentum started to wane.', 'The past eight years for Under Armour have been a struggle that doesn’t appear to be abating.', 'The company on Thursday announced a restructuring of its business as its North America sales in its most recent quarter tumbled 10%.', 'Looking ahead, the company cast a dour forecast for its current fiscal year, expecting sales to drop 15% to 17%.', 'Layoffs will be part of the effort to right the ship but executives did not specify how many employees will lose their jobs.', 'Under Armour also announced a $500 million share buyback, a move to reward shareholders.', 'Plank told analysts during the earnings call on Thursday that he will shepherd a reset of the business that centers on selling fewer but more innovative products to meet the needs of athletes, significantly accelerating product development, refocusing on its men’s apparel category and reducing discounts of its products.', '“We are simply doing too much stuff.', 'There are too many products, too many initiatives.', 'To reconstitute this brand, we must be highly focused and prioritize what needs to get done so that our teams know exactly what to do with a clear definition of success for them,” Plank said.', 'It can’t be ignored that management issues, too, have plagued the business for years, Swartz said.', '“The company has essentially had five CEOs in the past five years, if you count Kevin Plank twice,” said Swartz.', 'Plank was announced as CEO — again — in March, ending the very brief year-long tenure of Stephanie Linnartz.', 'Plank conceded during the analysts call Thursday that frequent C-suite turnover had become a serious impediment to success.', '“With several CEOs and heads of product, marketing in North America over the past half-decade, ongoing turnover of critical leadership has been central to our inability to stay agile and decisive,” he said.', 'The period from 2016 onward is when “things really started to fall apart” at Under Armour, Swartz said.', 'A huge issue arose when an important channel of distribution for the brand went bankrupt and closed stores.', 'A bulk of Under Armour products are sold through sporting goods retailers and department stores, including Macy’s and Kohl’s, and online.', '“When Sports Authority went bankrupt in 2016 it really hurt Under Armour.', 'It was a major customer of the brand, as is Dick’s Sporting Goods,” Schwartz said.', 'In 2020, UCLA sued Under Armour for ending a $280 million sponsorship deal.', 'The suit alleged that Under Armour was struggling before Covid-19 and that it used the pandemic as a reason to get out of the deal.', 'The 15-year sponsorship deal, signed in 2016, was thelargest in the historyof college sports at the time.', 'In exchange for the $280 million, UCLA’s student athletes and personnel would wear and use Under Armour(UA)-supplied products exclusively.', 'The company reached a settlement with UCLA.', 'The following year, Under Armour paid $9 million to settle a multi-year investigation with the US Securities and Exchange Commission into its past accounting practices, according to Footwear News.', 'Outside of other bad press for Plank, competitors were gaining ground on Under Armour, whose high-performance sportwear offerings weren’t best suited for the Lululemon-driven athleisure trend that had emerged and then dominated the way consumers dressed through the pandemic.', '“Under Armour has failed to latch upon streetwear, or sports style that catapulted On or Hoka or Merrell,” said Zak Stambor, senior analyst, retail and ecommerce, with market research firm eMarketer, in an interview with CNN. “', 'It needs to figure out what is next.', 'If it can’t do that, then it needs to quickly latch upon what another brand has identified as the next big thing.”', 'Stambor questioned Plank’s decision to pull back from discounts at a time when consumers are hyper focused on value.', '“It carries the risk of decreasing demand particularly when you don’t have a must-have product,” he said.', 'Stambor said this decision also stands in stark contrast to a recent move that rival Adidas has made to roll out cheaper versions of their must-have shoes.', 'Despite it’s significant challenges, Stambor said Under Armour can remain relevant in the market. “', 'It is a very large company with huge revenue.', 'It’s not as though the brand has fully diminished in standing.', 'It’s a bit stuck,” he said.', '“Under Armour needs to identify what it is that consumers want and lean heavily in that direction.', 'It hasn’t fully shown an ability to do so over the past few years,” he said.', 'One area that’s going strong is the brand’s long-term celebrity-brand partnerships, said Eric Smallwood, president of Apex Marketing Group, a sports and entertainment firm that evaluates sponsorships and advertising campaigns.', '“Under Armour’s relationship with the ‘The Rock’, Dwayne Johnson, has been pretty effective.', 'They’ve expanded to the United Football League, which is the football league that Johnson co-owns,” Smallwood said. “', 'Their uniforms are Under Armour.”', 'Golf is another area where the brand is making inroads while the Stephen Curry partnership has kept the brand visible in the basketball world, Smallwood said.', 'The basketball superstar Curry, arguably the best shooter in history, famously signed with Under Armour instead of Nike in 2013.', 'Meanwhile, the brand’s other major NBA star, Joel Embiid, quit Under Armour in 2023 a few months after he was named the league’s most valuable player.', 'Embiid signed a shoe deal with Skechers last month.', 'Under Armour reportedly bid hard for a shoe deal with WNBA phenom Caitlin Clark, who many expect will sign with Nike.', '“The bottomline for Under Armour is for the brand to be clear about its identity,” he said. “', 'Are they a shoe company?', 'Are they an apparel company?', 'At one point everyone else copied their mositure-wicking undershirt.', 'Then maybe they had an identity crisis.', 'It’s going to come down to deciding if they want to evolve into a lifestyle brand or stay in performance-based products.”']",0.0532210799845875,"To reconstitute this brand, we must be highly focused and prioritize what needs to get done so that our teams know exactly what to do with a clear definition of success for them,” Plank said.","Industry experts said the company is mired in an unpleasant mix of problems, which include an identity crisis, several management controversies, ignoring evolving market trends to its detriment, and a rotating carousel of CEOs in quick succession.",-0.0870118283090137,"One area that’s going strong is the brand’s long-term celebrity-brand partnerships, said Eric Smallwood, president of Apex Marketing Group, a sports and entertainment firm that evaluates sponsorships and advertising campaigns.","Under Armour’s annual sales have been sluggish at best for the past several years, while its stock has plunged 88% from its all-time high in 2015.",2024-05-19 Facebook and Instagram suspected to be 'too addictive',https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cv2d2j8y38lo,2024-05-16T11:09:48.629Z,"The European Union is investigating Facebook and Instagram over whether they are so addictive that they are having ""negative effects"" on the ""physical and mental health"" of children. It will also scrutinise if they have done enough to check whether users are old enough to use them, and how content is recommended to children. A number of big tech firms are now under investigation for potential breaches of the EU's tough new Digital Services Act (DSA), and could be fined up to 6% of annual global turnover. Meta, which owns both platforms, says it has ""spent a decade developing more than 50 tools and policies"" to protect children. ""This is a challenge the whole industry is facing, and we look forward to sharing details of our work with the European Commission,"" it said. in September, Meta provided regulators with a report on the risks associated with its platforms, as required under the DSA. The EU has responded by beginning proceedings. ""The Commission is concerned that the systems of both Facebook and Instagram, including their algorithms, may stimulate behavioural addictions in children, as well as create so-called 'rabbit-hole effects',"" the EU said announcing the investigation. Rabbit-hole effects refer to the propensity of algorithms, when a user looks at one piece of harmful content, to suggest more of the same. How Meta checks the ages of users - so called age assurance - is of concern to the EU. ""In addition, the Commission is also concerned about age-assurance and verification methods put in place by Meta"", the statement added. Algorithms which promote harmful content have also been a key concern of the UK communications watchdog Ofcom as it sets out how it may enforce the Online Safety Act. As with most social networks, users of Meta platforms must be 13 or over, but as Ofcom revealed in a recent report many much younger children use accounts, sometimes with the knowledge of their parents. EU Commissioner Thierry Breton said in a post on X: ""We are not convinced that Meta has done enough to comply with the DSA obligations — to mitigate the risks of negative effects to the physical and mental health of young Europeans on its platforms Facebook and Instagram"". Mr Breton added the EU was ""sparing no effort to protect youth"". Fellow commissioner Margrethe Vestager said in a statement: ""We have concerns that Facebook and Instagram may stimulate behavioural addiction and that the methods of age verification that Meta has put in place on their services is not adequate."" Meta is already under investigation by the EU over concerns around political disinformation. ",BBC,16/05/2024,"['The European Union is investigating Facebook and Instagram over whether they are so addictive that they are having ""negative effects"" on the ""physical and mental health"" of children.', 'It will also scrutinise if they have done enough to check whether users are old enough to use them, and how content is recommended to children.', ""A number of big tech firms are now under investigation for potential breaches of the EU's tough new Digital Services Act (DSA), and could be fined up to 6% of annual global turnover."", 'Meta, which owns both platforms, says it has ""spent a decade developing more than 50 tools and policies"" to protect children. ""', 'This is a challenge the whole industry is facing, and we look forward to sharing details of our work with the European Commission,"" it said.', 'in September, Meta provided regulators with a report on the risks associated with its platforms, as required under the DSA.', 'The EU has responded by beginning proceedings. ""', 'The Commission is concerned that the systems of both Facebook and Instagram, including their algorithms, may stimulate behavioural addictions in children, as well as create so-called \'rabbit-hole effects\',"" the EU said announcing the investigation.', 'Rabbit-hole effects refer to the propensity of algorithms, when a user looks at one piece of harmful content, to suggest more of the same.', 'How Meta checks the ages of users - so called age assurance - is of concern to the EU. ""', 'In addition, the Commission is also concerned about age-assurance and verification methods put in place by Meta"", the statement added.', 'Algorithms which promote harmful content have also been a key concern of the UK communications watchdog Ofcom as it sets out how it may enforce the Online Safety Act.', 'As with most social networks, users of Meta platforms must be 13 or over, but as Ofcom revealed in a recent report many much younger children use accounts, sometimes with the knowledge of their parents.', 'EU Commissioner Thierry Breton said in a post on X: ""We are not convinced that Meta has done enough to comply with the DSA obligations — to mitigate the risks of negative effects to the physical and mental health of young Europeans on its platforms Facebook and Instagram"".', 'Mr Breton added the EU was ""sparing no effort to protect youth"".', 'Fellow commissioner Margrethe Vestager said in a statement: ""We have concerns that Facebook and Instagram may stimulate behavioural addiction and that the methods of age verification that Meta has put in place on their services is not adequate.""', 'Meta is already under investigation by the EU over concerns around political disinformation.']",0.0913193513007795,Algorithms which promote harmful content have also been a key concern of the UK communications watchdog Ofcom as it sets out how it may enforce the Online Safety Act.,"EU Commissioner Thierry Breton said in a post on X: ""We are not convinced that Meta has done enough to comply with the DSA obligations — to mitigate the risks of negative effects to the physical and mental health of young Europeans on its platforms Facebook and Instagram"".",-0.5896288454532623,"EU Commissioner Thierry Breton said in a post on X: ""We are not convinced that Meta has done enough to comply with the DSA obligations — to mitigate the risks of negative effects to the physical and mental health of young Europeans on its platforms Facebook and Instagram"".","Fellow commissioner Margrethe Vestager said in a statement: ""We have concerns that Facebook and Instagram may stimulate behavioural addiction and that the methods of age verification that Meta has put in place on their services is not adequate.""",2024-05-19 Bubble tea bubble: Why investors are snubbing the popular drink,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cw4rp8ejevlo,2024-05-16T23:58:43.400Z,"From its origins in 1980s Taiwan to today's global craze, bubble tea or boba, has come a long way. Ask people under the age of 40 anywhere in the world whether they have ever tried the milky tea and tapioca ball concoction and there's a pretty good chance that they have. Bubble tea has certainly hit a sweet spot with its many fans but it has left some investors with a bitter taste. Stock market debuts of two China-based chains have already flopped. And there are at least two more share sales in the pipeline. Despite these hiccups, it's undeniable that boba has become a global phenomenon after its popularity spread from Asia to the West. From London to Helsinki and Buenos Aires to Cape Town, it's almost impossible to find a major city where it isn't on sale. There are now an estimated half a million bubble tea shops in China alone - a huge market for the drink, and one not too far from its origins in Taiwan. Thirty-something university lecturer Lili, who lives in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, first began drinking it while she was in primary school. Today she cannot go long without her fix. ""Bubble tea is an easy-to-get pleasure so I drink it quite often,"" she says. Tina, an office worker from Beijing also in her 30s, tells a similar story. She first tried boba when she was a child and now drinks it several times a week. She often makes group orders with co-workers and friends from a wide variety of well-known shops. Lili, Tina and millions of others like them have helped China's bubble tea businesses grow into a nationwide industry that last year was worth about 145 billion yuan ($20bn; £15.9bn), according to estimates by the China Chain Store & Franchise Association. Innovation has been a key to its success ""with new flavours and recipes constantly being launched"", according to Jason Yu at consumer research group Kantar Worldpanel. It's a strategy that resonates with Lili who says ""promotion campaigns, brand collaborations and new flavours"" have kept her going back for more. That approach has also helped bubble tea chains expand beyond China's major cities, Mr Yu says. This success story has continued even at a time when China's economy is slowing and consumers are tightening their belts. Bubble tea ""provides very much an affordable pleasure to consumers in China"", said Mr Yu, pointing to the ""wide price range"" of products being offered by different bubble tea chains. Some investors, however, have not shown the same level of enthusiasm. Seeking to cash in on the craze, several Chinese tea chains have looked to sell shares to the public in recent years. Last month, China's third largest bubble tea chain, Sichuan Baicha Baidao Industrial, known as Chabaidao, made its stock market debut. The shares plunged on their first day of trade and have yet to recover. That followed another disappointing debut by Shenzhen-based Nayuki. Its shares have lost more than 80% of their value since their launch in Hong Kong almost three years ago. Analysts point to a number of reasons for these weak performances, including concerns about the Hong Kong stock market as a whole. The amount raised from new listings in the city since the start of this year has dropped to levels not seen since 2009, according to consultancy firm Deloitte. But this hasn't discouraged other bubble tea chains from planning their own share sales. Earlier this year, China's first and second largest chains by number of shops - Mixue Group and Guming Holdings - submitted applications to list on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. ""Persisting weak market sentiment in Hong Kong is the primary reason"" for Chabaidao's market blunder, said Gary Ng, a senior economist at Natixis. He believes the city will struggle to attract new listings until there ""is a clear sign of China’s pivot to growth and lower US interest rates"". Others, however, say investors are focusing on problems within the bubble tea industry itself. It ""has relatively low barriers to entry, leading to increased competition,"" said Kenny Ng, Securities Strategist of Everbright Securities International. ""Many companies rely on opening new stores to sustain revenue growth. However, this expansion strategy can lead to a decline in gross profit margins as companies face higher costs associated with store operations and management."" For bubble tea fans, growing competition has its advantages. Han is a regular boba drinker from Beijing who used to stay away from certain premium brands because she found them too expensive. That has changed. She says price has become less of a factor when choosing between different brands because ""they have a lot of discounts and vouchers"". But for bubble tea makers and their potential investors, lower prices and higher costs could prove to be an unattractive recipe. ""The Chabaidao case highlights the risks and does not bode well for the listings of other bubble tea chains,"" warned Gary Ng. Lili and Han say there is another far more important risk associated with the often sugar-packed drink that is holding them back from ordering more - putting on weight. ",BBC,16/05/2024,"[""From its origins in 1980s Taiwan to today's global craze, bubble tea or boba, has come a long way."", ""Ask people under the age of 40 anywhere in the world whether they have ever tried the milky tea and tapioca ball concoction and there's a pretty good chance that they have."", 'Bubble tea has certainly hit a sweet spot with its many fans but it has left some investors with a bitter taste.', 'Stock market debuts of two China-based chains have already flopped.', 'And there are at least two more share sales in the pipeline.', ""Despite these hiccups, it's undeniable that boba has become a global phenomenon after its popularity spread from Asia to the West."", ""From London to Helsinki and Buenos Aires to Cape Town, it's almost impossible to find a major city where it isn't on sale."", 'There are now an estimated half a million bubble tea shops in China alone - a huge market for the drink, and one not too far from its origins in Taiwan.', 'Thirty-something university lecturer Lili, who lives in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, first began drinking it while she was in primary school.', 'Today she cannot go long without her fix. ""', 'Bubble tea is an easy-to-get pleasure so I drink it quite often,"" she says.', 'Tina, an office worker from Beijing also in her 30s, tells a similar story.', 'She first tried boba when she was a child and now drinks it several times a week.', 'She often makes group orders with co-workers and friends from a wide variety of well-known shops.', ""Lili, Tina and millions of others like them have helped China's bubble tea businesses grow into a nationwide industry that last year was worth about 145 billion yuan ($20bn; £15.9bn), according to estimates by the China Chain Store & Franchise Association."", 'Innovation has been a key to its success ""with new flavours and recipes constantly being launched"", according to Jason Yu at consumer research group Kantar Worldpanel.', 'It\'s a strategy that resonates with Lili who says ""promotion campaigns, brand collaborations and new flavours"" have kept her going back for more.', ""That approach has also helped bubble tea chains expand beyond China's major cities, Mr Yu says."", ""This success story has continued even at a time when China's economy is slowing and consumers are tightening their belts."", 'Bubble tea ""provides very much an affordable pleasure to consumers in China"", said Mr Yu, pointing to the ""wide price range"" of products being offered by different bubble tea chains.', 'Some investors, however, have not shown the same level of enthusiasm.', 'Seeking to cash in on the craze, several Chinese tea chains have looked to sell shares to the public in recent years.', ""Last month, China's third largest bubble tea chain, Sichuan Baicha Baidao Industrial, known as Chabaidao, made its stock market debut."", 'The shares plunged on their first day of trade and have yet to recover.', 'That followed another disappointing debut by Shenzhen-based Nayuki.', 'Its shares have lost more than 80% of their value since their launch in Hong Kong almost three years ago.', 'Analysts point to a number of reasons for these weak performances, including concerns about the Hong Kong stock market as a whole.', 'The amount raised from new listings in the city since the start of this year has dropped to levels not seen since 2009, according to consultancy firm Deloitte.', ""But this hasn't discouraged other bubble tea chains from planning their own share sales."", 'Earlier this year, China\'s first and second largest chains by number of shops - Mixue Group and Guming Holdings - submitted applications to list on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. ""', 'Persisting weak market sentiment in Hong Kong is the primary reason"" for Chabaidao\'s market blunder, said Gary Ng, a senior economist at Natixis.', 'He believes the city will struggle to attract new listings until there ""is a clear sign of China’s pivot to growth and lower US interest rates"".', 'Others, however, say investors are focusing on problems within the bubble tea industry itself.', 'It ""has relatively low barriers to entry, leading to increased competition,"" said Kenny Ng, Securities Strategist of Everbright Securities International. ""', 'Many companies rely on opening new stores to sustain revenue growth.', 'However, this expansion strategy can lead to a decline in gross profit margins as companies face higher costs associated with store operations and management.""', 'For bubble tea fans, growing competition has its advantages.', 'Han is a regular boba drinker from Beijing who used to stay away from certain premium brands because she found them too expensive.', 'That has changed.', 'She says price has become less of a factor when choosing between different brands because ""they have a lot of discounts and vouchers"".', 'But for bubble tea makers and their potential investors, lower prices and higher costs could prove to be an unattractive recipe. ""', 'The Chabaidao case highlights the risks and does not bode well for the listings of other bubble tea chains,"" warned Gary Ng.', 'Lili and Han say there is another far more important risk associated with the often sugar-packed drink that is holding them back from ordering more - putting on weight.']",0.1338541877305695,Ask people under the age of 40 anywhere in the world whether they have ever tried the milky tea and tapioca ball concoction and there's a pretty good chance that they have.,"But for bubble tea makers and their potential investors, lower prices and higher costs could prove to be an unattractive recipe. """,-0.0212943541506926,"That approach has also helped bubble tea chains expand beyond China's major cities, Mr Yu says.","However, this expansion strategy can lead to a decline in gross profit margins as companies face higher costs associated with store operations and management.""",2024-05-19 Union momentum stalls with defeat at Mercedes-Benz,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/clw0wwwdryno,2024-05-17T20:40:10.629Z,"The United Autoworkers Union (UAW) in the US has suffered a defeat in its campaign to expand membership to car factories in the American south. Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama voted 2,642-2,045 against joining the union, with 56% of eligible ballots cast opposed, according to the National Labor Relations Committee. The outcome is a blow to an effort the union started last year, hoping to seize on a wider resurgence in worker activism and build on the momentum it had gained after winning big raises for workers at General Motors, Ford and Stellantis. The UAW notched its first victory at a Volkswagen factory in Tennessee last month. But its efforts in Alabama met with stiff resistance, including from state and local politicians such as Governor Kay Ivey, who called the union campaign a ""threat from Detroit"" that put the state's car industry at risk. Regulators are also investigating union complaints that the company broke labour law in its opposition to the effort, including by barring distribution of union materials and punishing staff who discussed or supported the effort. Mercedes has denied the claims. It said before the vote that it respected its staff's right to choose, while believing that ""open and direct communication with our Team Members is the best path forward to ensure continued success"". After the results were announced, the company said its goal had been ""to ensure every eligible team member had the opportunity to participate in a fair election"". ""We thank all team members who asked questions, engaged in discussions, and ultimately, made their voices heard on this important issue,"" it said in a statement. UAW boss Shawn Fain last year announced that the UAW would target 13 foreign-owned factories in the South, in a bid to bring in new members to the organisation, whose numbers have steadily dwindled. It marked a risky push for the organisation - which is closely associated with the Democratic party - in to a part of the country that is both staunchly Republican and historically hostile to unions. Mr Fain said in a press conference after the results that it had been a ""David and Goliath"" fight, in which the company had used ""egregious illegal behaviour"" to swing the vote its way. ""We know what we're taking on,"" he said. ""While this loss stings, we're going to keep our heads up."" He said even the threat of unionisation had helped improve conditions at the factory, leading to a pay increase and other changes. He said he was not scared it would hurt the UAW's campaigns at other factories. ""We fought the good fight and we're going to continue forward,"" he said. Outside of the car industry, the last major effort to organise workers in Alabama at an Amazon factory failed in 2021. ",BBC,17/05/2024,"['The United Autoworkers Union (UAW) in the US has suffered a defeat in its campaign to expand membership to car factories in the American south.', 'Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama voted 2,642-2,045 against joining the union, with 56% of eligible ballots cast opposed, according to the National Labor Relations Committee.', 'The outcome is a blow to an effort the union started last year, hoping to seize on a wider resurgence in worker activism and build on the momentum it had gained after winning big raises for workers at General Motors, Ford and Stellantis.', 'The UAW notched its first victory at a Volkswagen factory in Tennessee last month.', 'But its efforts in Alabama met with stiff resistance, including from state and local politicians such as Governor Kay Ivey, who called the union campaign a ""threat from Detroit"" that put the state\'s car industry at risk.', 'Regulators are also investigating union complaints that the company broke labour law in its opposition to the effort, including by barring distribution of union materials and punishing staff who discussed or supported the effort.', 'Mercedes has denied the claims.', 'It said before the vote that it respected its staff\'s right to choose, while believing that ""open and direct communication with our Team Members is the best path forward to ensure continued success"".', 'After the results were announced, the company said its goal had been ""to ensure every eligible team member had the opportunity to participate in a fair election"". ""', 'We thank all team members who asked questions, engaged in discussions, and ultimately, made their voices heard on this important issue,"" it said in a statement.', 'UAW boss Shawn Fain last year announced that the UAW would target 13 foreign-owned factories in the South, in a bid to bring in new members to the organisation, whose numbers have steadily dwindled.', 'It marked a risky push for the organisation - which is closely associated with the Democratic party - in to a part of the country that is both staunchly Republican and historically hostile to unions.', 'Mr Fain said in a press conference after the results that it had been a ""David and Goliath"" fight, in which the company had used ""egregious illegal behaviour"" to swing the vote its way. ""', 'We know what we\'re taking on,"" he said. ""', 'While this loss stings, we\'re going to keep our heads up.""', 'He said even the threat of unionisation had helped improve conditions at the factory, leading to a pay increase and other changes.', 'He said he was not scared it would hurt the UAW\'s campaigns at other factories. ""', 'We fought the good fight and we\'re going to continue forward,"" he said.', 'Outside of the car industry, the last major effort to organise workers in Alabama at an Amazon factory failed in 2021.']",-0.0555974619666719,"It said before the vote that it respected its staff's right to choose, while believing that ""open and direct communication with our Team Members is the best path forward to ensure continued success"".","But its efforts in Alabama met with stiff resistance, including from state and local politicians such as Governor Kay Ivey, who called the union campaign a ""threat from Detroit"" that put the state's car industry at risk.",-0.1374789774417877,"He said even the threat of unionisation had helped improve conditions at the factory, leading to a pay increase and other changes.","UAW boss Shawn Fain last year announced that the UAW would target 13 foreign-owned factories in the South, in a bid to bring in new members to the organisation, whose numbers have steadily dwindled.",2024-05-19 Is the move to electric cars running out of power?,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-69022771,2024-05-16T23:10:34.000Z,"Buoyant electric car sales are a must if we're to hit our climate targets. But EV sales in the West are down and if governments want them to recover it may have to be at the expense of their own economies. Any motorway driver will know the feeling: you're cruising along, miles of open road seemingly ahead and then from nowhere, a slowdown. Something similar has hit the electric vehicle market in 2024. After years of soaring sales, growth appears to be stalling. Replacing fossil-fuel-powered cars with EVs is central to the UK government's plan to meet its climate goals - road transport accounting for 12% of planetary emissions. Listen to Ben read this article The question is whether this is a blip that will soon disappear into the rear-view mirror, or is this going to prove more enduring? And if it lasts, will governments have the stomach to do what it takes to keep the net zero show on the road? The growth in EV sales has been remarkable. In 2020, there were 10 million EVs on the road, in 2023 there were 45 million. But sales need to stay remarkable, and the chart below shows just how. By 2035, the International Energy Agency (IEA) says there will need to be 790 million EVs if we're to hit net zero by the middle of the century. That implies growth in sales of 27% every single year. That's why the fact that global sales of the world's largest EV maker, Tesla, were actually lower in the first quarter of 2024 than in the same period in 2023 has raised eyebrows. China's largest EV manufacturer BYD has been vying with Tesla for the number-one spot. BYD also saw a slowdown between January and March. And EV sales in Europe fell more than 10% year-on-year in the final quarter of last year - although in the UK total sales are running up on last year. In the UK, analysts say strong EV sales in recent years were fuelled by company car purchases, thanks to generous tax breaks. But the household market is proving a tougher nut to crack, with people saying they are mostly put off by the high cost. The average price of a new EV in the US is over $60,000 (£47,433). Prices are similarly high in Europe and the UK. Large state subsidies and greater production efficiencies mean the average cost to a Chinese consumer is just $30,000. And BYD's Seagull hatchback sells for less than $10,000. China is also making massively more EVs than its domestic market needs - it could easily flood the US and European markets with cheap cars if they weren't held back by tariffs. Here is the dilemma for European and US politicians. They want cheaper EVs to facilitate the climate transition, but not at the cost of undermining their own car manufacturers - the likes of Ford and Volkswagen - and local jobs. In fact, the talk is actually of raising tariffs and other trade barriers on imports to keep out ultra-competitive Chinese EVs. That's precisely what US President Joe Biden did this week, with a new 100% tariff on Chinese EV imports. The IEA still projects a sales rise in 2024, which would keep us more or less on track for net zero. Optimists hope more people will buy EVs when cut-price second-hand vehicles come onto the market in Europe and America. But that clear road is not guaranteed. It may be that EV prices in the West do prove sticky, while China keeps churning out super-cheap vehicles. If that happens, expect that tension between the desire of Western governments to decarbonise transport and their desire to protect domestic manufacturing champions to grow even more acute. At some stage they might be forced to choose. BBC InDepth is the new home on the website and app for the best analysis and expertise from our top journalists. Under a distinctive new brand, we'll bring you fresh perspectives that challenge assumptions, and deep reporting on the biggest issues to help you make sense of a complex world. And we'll be showcasing thought-provoking content from across BBC Sounds and iPlayer too. We're starting small but thinking big, and we want to know what you think - you can send us your feedback by clicking on the button below. InDepth is the new home for the best analysis from across BBC News. Tell us what you think by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk. Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also get in touch in the following ways: If you are reading this page and can't see the form you will need to visit the mobile version of the BBC website to submit your question or comment or you can email us at HaveYourSay@bbc.co.uk. Please include your name, age and location with any submission. ",BBC,16/05/2024,"[""Buoyant electric car sales are a must if we're to hit our climate targets."", 'But EV sales in the West are down and if governments want them to recover it may have to be at the expense of their own economies.', ""Any motorway driver will know the feeling: you're cruising along, miles of open road seemingly ahead and then from nowhere, a slowdown."", 'Something similar has hit the electric vehicle market in 2024.', 'After years of soaring sales, growth appears to be stalling.', ""Replacing fossil-fuel-powered cars with EVs is central to the UK government's plan to meet its climate goals - road transport accounting for 12% of planetary emissions."", 'Listen to Ben read this article The question is whether this is a blip that will soon disappear into the rear-view mirror, or is this going to prove more enduring?', 'And if it lasts, will governments have the stomach to do what it takes to keep the net zero show on the road?', 'The growth in EV sales has been remarkable.', 'In 2020, there were 10 million EVs on the road, in 2023 there were 45 million.', 'But sales need to stay remarkable, and the chart below shows just how.', ""By 2035, the International Energy Agency (IEA) says there will need to be 790 million EVs if we're to hit net zero by the middle of the century."", 'That implies growth in sales of 27% every single year.', ""That's why the fact that global sales of the world's largest EV maker, Tesla, were actually lower in the first quarter of 2024 than in the same period in 2023 has raised eyebrows."", ""China's largest EV manufacturer BYD has been vying with Tesla for the number-one spot."", 'BYD also saw a slowdown between January and March.', 'And EV sales in Europe fell more than 10% year-on-year in the final quarter of last year - although in the UK total sales are running up on last year.', 'In the UK, analysts say strong EV sales in recent years were fuelled by company car purchases, thanks to generous tax breaks.', 'But the household market is proving a tougher nut to crack, with people saying they are mostly put off by the high cost.', 'The average price of a new EV in the US is over $60,000 (£47,433).', 'Prices are similarly high in Europe and the UK.', 'Large state subsidies and greater production efficiencies mean the average cost to a Chinese consumer is just $30,000.', ""And BYD's Seagull hatchback sells for less than $10,000."", ""China is also making massively more EVs than its domestic market needs - it could easily flood the US and European markets with cheap cars if they weren't held back by tariffs."", 'Here is the dilemma for European and US politicians.', 'They want cheaper EVs to facilitate the climate transition, but not at the cost of undermining their own car manufacturers - the likes of Ford and Volkswagen - and local jobs.', 'In fact, the talk is actually of raising tariffs and other trade barriers on imports to keep out ultra-competitive Chinese EVs.', ""That's precisely what US President Joe Biden did this week, with a new 100% tariff on Chinese EV imports."", 'The IEA still projects a sales rise in 2024, which would keep us more or less on track for net zero.', 'Optimists hope more people will buy EVs when cut-price second-hand vehicles come onto the market in Europe and America.', 'But that clear road is not guaranteed.', 'It may be that EV prices in the West do prove sticky, while China keeps churning out super-cheap vehicles.', 'If that happens, expect that tension between the desire of Western governments to decarbonise transport and their desire to protect domestic manufacturing champions to grow even more acute.', 'At some stage they might be forced to choose.', 'BBC InDepth is the new home on the website and app for the best analysis and expertise from our top journalists.', ""Under a distinctive new brand, we'll bring you fresh perspectives that challenge assumptions, and deep reporting on the biggest issues to help you make sense of a complex world."", ""And we'll be showcasing thought-provoking content from across BBC Sounds and iPlayer too."", ""We're starting small but thinking big, and we want to know what you think - you can send us your feedback by clicking on the button below."", 'InDepth is the new home for the best analysis from across BBC News.', 'Tell us what you think by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.', 'Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist.', ""You can also get in touch in the following ways: If you are reading this page and can't see the form you will need to visit the mobile version of the BBC website to submit your question or comment or you can email us at HaveYourSay@bbc.co.uk."", 'Please include your name, age and location with any submission.']",0.2199758373447584,"In the UK, analysts say strong EV sales in recent years were fuelled by company car purchases, thanks to generous tax breaks.",At some stage they might be forced to choose.,0.0719603268723738,"The IEA still projects a sales rise in 2024, which would keep us more or less on track for net zero.","That's why the fact that global sales of the world's largest EV maker, Tesla, were actually lower in the first quarter of 2024 than in the same period in 2023 has raised eyebrows.",2024-05-19 The rise and fall of Canada's 'Crypto King' Aiden Pleterski,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-69023845,2024-05-16T22:09:27.000Z,"In December 2022, in the middle of the night, 25-year-old Aiden Pleterski was kidnapped in downtown Toronto. His captors released the self-proclaimed ""Crypto King"" after three days but under threat - Mr Pleterski had to come up with some money, fast, according to court documents. ""I'm sorry, I really am, I didn't want to or mean to ruin anyone's life,"" a bruised and bloodied Mr Pleterski is seen saying in a video obtained by CBC News. His lawyer later said the video was filmed during the kidnapping. It wasn't the first - or last - trouble for the young Canadian man who billed himself as a crypto whiz promising ""savvy investments"". This week, following a 16-month investigation, Ontario police and the provincial securities commission announced Mr Pleterski had been charged with fraud over C$5,000 ($3,600; £2,900) and for laundering the proceeds of crime. Police also charged another man, Colin Murphy, 27, allegedly an associate of Mr Pleterski's. The investigation, dubbed ""Project Swan"" by authorities, is believed to be the largest fraud case ever in the region, Durham Regional Police Chief Peter Moreira said on Thursday. It involved interviews with ""a large number"" of victims, over three dozen court orders and thousands of pages of financial documents, he said. Mr Pleterski was not registered ""in any capacity"" with any Canadian securities regulator, said Stephen Henkel, with the Ontario Securities Commission. Authorities said Mr Pleterski may have solicited investors as recently as February 2024. If convicted, he could face up to 14 years behind bars. None of the allegations against Mr Pleterski have been tested in court. Announcing the charges on Thursday, Ontario authorities were tight-lipped about the details of their case, citing a publication ban surrounding the case. But according to ongoing bankruptcy proceedings, Mr Pleterski had raised some C$41.5m from investors, promising to invest in cryptocurrency and foreign markets. He invested only 1.6% of that sum - while spending millions on luxury cars, flights on private jets and lakefront mansions, according to court documents. Mr Pleterski was still in high school when he began dabbling in cryptocurrency, using it to make purchases in video games like Call of Duty. At the same time, he started noticing people ""posting luxury cars, posting luxury lifestyles"" on social media, he said during an interview for his bankruptcy case. Mr Pleterski looked into it and found many said they made their money from cryptocurrency investments. ""That's what sparked my interest,"" he said. By 2020, Mr Pleterski began investing, starting with a few thousand dollars from family members and some money from his work as a baseball umpire. By December of that year, he had moved into his own rental home, paying C$9,000 each month with income from his trading plus a ""couple thousand dollars"" from a government emergency benefit for people hurt financially by the Covid-19 pandemic. A few months later, he had moved again - into a multi-million dollar five-bedroom mansion in Burlington, 50km (30 miles) south of Toronto. That same year, his own parents wanted to invest and gave him a sum of C$50,000, according to court documents. Mr Pleterski gave his parents a return on their investment, they said, in addition to luxury gifts - a McLaren 60LT and BMW M8 for his dad, a Louis Vuitton bag and Burberry coat for his mother, and a 2017 Bentley Bentayga for the couple's wedding anniversary. Dragan and Kathy Pleterski told lawyers with Grant Thornton, an accounting firm and the appointed trustee in the bankruptcy case, they believed their son was ""operating a successful investment business"". All the while, he was cultivating the kind of social media presence that had first sparked his interest in investing. Mr Pleterski posted photos of himself on private jets, on holiday in Miami and the Bahamas, and of a driveway filled with luxury cars. ""Where will life bring me next?"" he wrote in one caption. But by April 2022, cracks in Mr Pleterski's lavish life began to show. Lawsuits brought by investors began piling up, with allegations he had misappropriated their money. From there, it was a slow drip. In July, Ontario's Superior Court ordered Mr Pleterski's assets frozen. In August, the court ordered him and his company into bankruptcy. Then, in December, came the alleged kidnapping. Last summer, Toronto police arrested five suspects on kidnapping for ransom and other charges, including one man who had invested funds with Mr Pleterski, court documents say. The new owners of Mr Pleterski's Burlington mansion also faced threats. Canadian NBA star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and his partner Hailey Summers fled the property after a man showed up and demanded to know where Mr Pleterski was. After the couple reported the incident, police said they had received previous reports of attempted break-ins at the property. ""Ms Summers and Mr Gilgeous-Alexander were sufficiently alarmed by this news that they moved out of their newly purchased dream house, never to return,"" their lawyer said in court documents. The couple later won a lawsuit voiding the purchase of the home. For his part, Mr Pleterski made what appeared to be one of his first public references to the saga on Thursday, posting a simple Instagram story thanking his followers for standing by him. ""So many of you guys are supportive, y'all are amazing,"" he wrote. ",BBC,16/05/2024,"['In December 2022, in the middle of the night, 25-year-old Aiden Pleterski was kidnapped in downtown Toronto.', 'His captors released the self-proclaimed ""Crypto King"" after three days but under threat - Mr Pleterski had to come up with some money, fast, according to court documents. ""', 'I\'m sorry, I really am, I didn\'t want to or mean to ruin anyone\'s life,"" a bruised and bloodied Mr Pleterski is seen saying in a video obtained by CBC News.', 'His lawyer later said the video was filmed during the kidnapping.', 'It wasn\'t the first - or last - trouble for the young Canadian man who billed himself as a crypto whiz promising ""savvy investments"".', 'This week, following a 16-month investigation, Ontario police and the provincial securities commission announced Mr Pleterski had been charged with fraud over C$5,000 ($3,600; £2,900) and for laundering the proceeds of crime.', ""Police also charged another man, Colin Murphy, 27, allegedly an associate of Mr Pleterski's."", 'The investigation, dubbed ""Project Swan"" by authorities, is believed to be the largest fraud case ever in the region, Durham Regional Police Chief Peter Moreira said on Thursday.', 'It involved interviews with ""a large number"" of victims, over three dozen court orders and thousands of pages of financial documents, he said.', 'Mr Pleterski was not registered ""in any capacity"" with any Canadian securities regulator, said Stephen Henkel, with the Ontario Securities Commission.', 'Authorities said Mr Pleterski may have solicited investors as recently as February 2024.', 'If convicted, he could face up to 14 years behind bars.', 'None of the allegations against Mr Pleterski have been tested in court.', 'Announcing the charges on Thursday, Ontario authorities were tight-lipped about the details of their case, citing a publication ban surrounding the case.', 'But according to ongoing bankruptcy proceedings, Mr Pleterski had raised some C$41.5m from investors, promising to invest in cryptocurrency and foreign markets.', 'He invested only 1.6% of that sum - while spending millions on luxury cars, flights on private jets and lakefront mansions, according to court documents.', 'Mr Pleterski was still in high school when he began dabbling in cryptocurrency, using it to make purchases in video games like Call of Duty.', 'At the same time, he started noticing people ""posting luxury cars, posting luxury lifestyles"" on social media, he said during an interview for his bankruptcy case.', 'Mr Pleterski looked into it and found many said they made their money from cryptocurrency investments. ""', 'That\'s what sparked my interest,"" he said.', 'By 2020, Mr Pleterski began investing, starting with a few thousand dollars from family members and some money from his work as a baseball umpire.', 'By December of that year, he had moved into his own rental home, paying C$9,000 each month with income from his trading plus a ""couple thousand dollars"" from a government emergency benefit for people hurt financially by the Covid-19 pandemic.', 'A few months later, he had moved again - into a multi-million dollar five-bedroom mansion in Burlington, 50km (30 miles) south of Toronto.', 'That same year, his own parents wanted to invest and gave him a sum of C$50,000, according to court documents.', ""Mr Pleterski gave his parents a return on their investment, they said, in addition to luxury gifts - a McLaren 60LT and BMW M8 for his dad, a Louis Vuitton bag and Burberry coat for his mother, and a 2017 Bentley Bentayga for the couple's wedding anniversary."", 'Dragan and Kathy Pleterski told lawyers with Grant Thornton, an accounting firm and the appointed trustee in the bankruptcy case, they believed their son was ""operating a successful investment business"".', 'All the while, he was cultivating the kind of social media presence that had first sparked his interest in investing.', 'Mr Pleterski posted photos of himself on private jets, on holiday in Miami and the Bahamas, and of a driveway filled with luxury cars. ""', 'Where will life bring me next?""', 'he wrote in one caption.', ""But by April 2022, cracks in Mr Pleterski's lavish life began to show."", 'Lawsuits brought by investors began piling up, with allegations he had misappropriated their money.', 'From there, it was a slow drip.', ""In July, Ontario's Superior Court ordered Mr Pleterski's assets frozen."", 'In August, the court ordered him and his company into bankruptcy.', 'Then, in December, came the alleged kidnapping.', 'Last summer, Toronto police arrested five suspects on kidnapping for ransom and other charges, including one man who had invested funds with Mr Pleterski, court documents say.', ""The new owners of Mr Pleterski's Burlington mansion also faced threats."", 'Canadian NBA star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and his partner Hailey Summers fled the property after a man showed up and demanded to know where Mr Pleterski was.', 'After the couple reported the incident, police said they had received previous reports of attempted break-ins at the property. ""', 'Ms Summers and Mr Gilgeous-Alexander were sufficiently alarmed by this news that they moved out of their newly purchased dream house, never to return,"" their lawyer said in court documents.', 'The couple later won a lawsuit voiding the purchase of the home.', 'For his part, Mr Pleterski made what appeared to be one of his first public references to the saga on Thursday, posting a simple Instagram story thanking his followers for standing by him. ""', 'So many of you guys are supportive, y\'all are amazing,"" he wrote.']",0.0047325670978228,"Dragan and Kathy Pleterski told lawyers with Grant Thornton, an accounting firm and the appointed trustee in the bankruptcy case, they believed their son was ""operating a successful investment business"".","This week, following a 16-month investigation, Ontario police and the provincial securities commission announced Mr Pleterski had been charged with fraud over C$5,000 ($3,600; £2,900) and for laundering the proceeds of crime.",0.2680489553345574,"Mr Pleterski gave his parents a return on their investment, they said, in addition to luxury gifts - a McLaren 60LT and BMW M8 for his dad, a Louis Vuitton bag and Burberry coat for his mother, and a 2017 Bentley Bentayga for the couple's wedding anniversary.","Ms Summers and Mr Gilgeous-Alexander were sufficiently alarmed by this news that they moved out of their newly purchased dream house, never to return,"" their lawyer said in court documents.",2024-05-19 Severn Trent boss defends multi-million pay packet despite sewage spills,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0dem8v7epzo,2024-05-17T09:15:20.483Z,"The boss of Severn Trent has defended her multi-million pound pay package despite sewage spills by the company rising by a third in 2023. Liv Garfield was awarded £3.2m in pay, bonuses and shares last year, while over the past four years she has earned nearly £13m. Severn Trent was responsible for more than 60,000 sewage spills last year which Ms Garfield told the BBC Today programme ""doesn't make me feel good"". However, she said that over the last few years Severn Trent has ""made massive progress on river quality"". The industry is under intense scrutiny about the quality of Britain's water following a series of sewage spillages. Sewage is defined as anything that goes down a home's drain, including from the toilet, personal washing or domestic cleaning such as from the washing machine or doing the dishes. It also includes run-off from roads. A warmer winter and wet weather mean that mainly roadside grills have been overwhelmed. Water firms argue they need more money to improve their infrastructure to help limit leaks. The next few weeks are key in determining by how much they can raise customers' bills. Some, such as Thames Water, wants to lift bills by 44% over the next five years to pay for investment. Industry regulator Ofwat will meet soon to decide on the increase for bills between 2025 and 2030, with draft proposals set to be announced on 12 June. Ofwat's decision on bills is potentially make-or-break for Thames Water, which is the UK's largest water company, with 16 million customers in London and the Thames Valley region. Its parent company, Kemble, is owned by some of the world's largest pension and sovereign wealth funds but it recently defaulted on debt payments. It means it is now effectively insolvent. Kemble was supposed to pump billions of pounds into Thames Water to upgrade its facilities that supply clean water and remove waste for a quarter of the UK. On Thursday, Michael McNicholas, a non-executive of Thames Water who represents Omer - a Canadian pension fund which is the biggest shareholder in Kemble - stepped down from the board ""with immediate effect"". Jim Wright, listed infrastructure fund manager at Premier Miton Investors, which invests in the water industry, said the departure could be the first in a series. ""I think this is part of a wider process,"" he told the BBC. ""We know that Kemble defaulted on a debt payment last month because the underlying shareholders were not prepared to inject any more equity and so I think this is the continuation of that process and of the owners simply walking away from the ownership vehicle.” Thames Water is ring-fenced and regulated but has billions of pounds worth of debt. Chris Weston, who joined Thames Water as chief executive in January, has said it has enough in cash and overdraft facilities last until next May. But if it cannot raise more money, it faces being nationalised under a measure known as special administration. There have been concerns that if Thames Water is placed in special administration it could make investors nervous about lending money to the rest of the industry. But Ms Garfield said: “It is quite different for us. We actually went to our investors just last October and asked them to inject money into the company and they gave us £1bn of cash so it is very, very different. ""I’m not in a position to comment on Thames but I can reassure every Severn Trent customer that we have a very healthy, very, very strong financial situation."" Ms Garfield said that the company would invest ""hundreds of millions of pounds"" in ""storm overflow solutions across 900 locations in the Midlands"" over the year. In it five-year plan submitted to Ofwat, Severn Trent wants to invest £12.9bn and increase customer bills by 35.7%. Between 2020 and 2025, the average annual bill for Severn Trent was £402.63, for the next five years the average would be £546.35 if its business plan is accepted by Ofwat. Sign up for our Future Earth newsletter to get exclusive insight on the latest climate and environment news from the BBC's Climate Editor Justin Rowlatt, delivered to your inbox every Tuesday. If you are outside the UK, sign up to our international Future Earth newsletter here. ",BBC,17/05/2024,"['The boss of Severn Trent has defended her multi-million pound pay package despite sewage spills by the company rising by a third in 2023.', 'Liv Garfield was awarded £3.2m in pay, bonuses and shares last year, while over the past four years she has earned nearly £13m. Severn Trent was responsible for more than 60,000 sewage spills last year which Ms Garfield told the BBC Today programme ""doesn\'t make me feel good"".', 'However, she said that over the last few years Severn Trent has ""made massive progress on river quality"".', ""The industry is under intense scrutiny about the quality of Britain's water following a series of sewage spillages."", ""Sewage is defined as anything that goes down a home's drain, including from the toilet, personal washing or domestic cleaning such as from the washing machine or doing the dishes."", 'It also includes run-off from roads.', 'A warmer winter and wet weather mean that mainly roadside grills have been overwhelmed.', 'Water firms argue they need more money to improve their infrastructure to help limit leaks.', ""The next few weeks are key in determining by how much they can raise customers' bills."", 'Some, such as Thames Water, wants to lift bills by 44% over the next five years to pay for investment.', 'Industry regulator Ofwat will meet soon to decide on the increase for bills between 2025 and 2030, with draft proposals set to be announced on 12 June.', ""Ofwat's decision on bills is potentially make-or-break for Thames Water, which is the UK's largest water company, with 16 million customers in London and the Thames Valley region."", ""Its parent company, Kemble, is owned by some of the world's largest pension and sovereign wealth funds but it recently defaulted on debt payments."", 'It means it is now effectively insolvent.', 'Kemble was supposed to pump billions of pounds into Thames Water to upgrade its facilities that supply clean water and remove waste for a quarter of the UK.', 'On Thursday, Michael McNicholas, a non-executive of Thames Water who represents Omer - a Canadian pension fund which is the biggest shareholder in Kemble - stepped down from the board ""with immediate effect"".', 'Jim Wright, listed infrastructure fund manager at Premier Miton Investors, which invests in the water industry, said the departure could be the first in a series. ""', 'I think this is part of a wider process,"" he told the BBC. ""', 'We know that Kemble defaulted on a debt payment last month because the underlying shareholders were not prepared to inject any more equity and so I think this is the continuation of that process and of the owners simply walking away from the ownership vehicle.”', 'Thames Water is ring-fenced and regulated but has billions of pounds worth of debt.', 'Chris Weston, who joined Thames Water as chief executive in January, has said it has enough in cash and overdraft facilities last until next May.', 'But if it cannot raise more money, it faces being nationalised under a measure known as special administration.', 'There have been concerns that if Thames Water is placed in special administration it could make investors nervous about lending money to the rest of the industry.', 'But Ms Garfield said: “It is quite different for us.', 'We actually went to our investors just last October and asked them to inject money into the company and they gave us £1bn of cash so it is very, very different. ""', 'I’m not in a position to comment on Thames but I can reassure every Severn Trent customer that we have a very healthy, very, very strong financial situation.""', 'Ms Garfield said that the company would invest ""hundreds of millions of pounds"" in ""storm overflow solutions across 900 locations in the Midlands"" over the year.', 'In it five-year plan submitted to Ofwat, Severn Trent wants to invest £12.9bn and increase customer bills by 35.7%.', 'Between 2020 and 2025, the average annual bill for Severn Trent was £402.63, for the next five years the average would be £546.35 if its business plan is accepted by Ofwat.', ""Sign up for our Future Earth newsletter to get exclusive insight on the latest climate and environment news from the BBC's Climate Editor Justin Rowlatt, delivered to your inbox every Tuesday."", 'If you are outside the UK, sign up to our international Future Earth newsletter here.']",0.1398190834220597,"I’m not in a position to comment on Thames but I can reassure every Severn Trent customer that we have a very healthy, very, very strong financial situation.""",We know that Kemble defaulted on a debt payment last month because the underlying shareholders were not prepared to inject any more equity and so I think this is the continuation of that process and of the owners simply walking away from the ownership vehicle.”,0.2020095984141031,The boss of Severn Trent has defended her multi-million pound pay package despite sewage spills by the company rising by a third in 2023.,A warmer winter and wet weather mean that mainly roadside grills have been overwhelmed.,2024-05-19 Virgin Trains makes bit to return to West Coast Main Line,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3ggn8k166xo,2024-05-19T13:35:50.495Z,"Virgin Trains could return to running rail services on the West Coast route between London and Glasgow five years after losing the franchise. It means that Virgin would be competing with Avanti West Coast, the train company it lost the contract to in 2019. Virgin Trains had operated the service, which runs from London Euston via Birmingham and Manchester to Scotland, for 22 years before it was disqualified from bidding for the franchise. Virgin Group confirmed to the BBC that it had applied to the Office of Rail and Road, the regulator, for an Open Access licence. Under this type of licence, a firm does not receive any state subsidies and takes on the risk of running a rail service itself. In contrast, a franchised operator, such as Avanti, holds a contact with the government to run the route. A spokesperson for Virgin Group said: ""While this application is just the first step towards exploring what might be possible, we think Open Access is the way forward. ""Open Access increases consumer choice and competition both of which Virgin has always supported."" Since taking over the franchise, Avanti has faced fierce criticism over delays and cancellations. Last September, the Department for Transport (DfT) renewed Avanti West Coast's contract for up to nine years. The company is a joint venture between FirstGroup and Trenitalia, an Italian train operator. But in March this year, Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham called for Avanti to be stripped of the contract. “I’ve completely run out of patience. I cannot accept this railway line being left in this perennial state of chaos,” he said. The DfT ruled out such a move, stating that it ""would just cause more upheaval for passengers rather than solving the challenges the operator is facing"". Virgin Group said that it has applied to run services between London Euston to Preston and Rochdale via Manchester and Bolton in the north west as well as to Birmingham, Liverpool and Glasgow. The previous train company was a joint venture between Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Group and Stagecoach, the Scottish bus and rail company. But a spokesperson for Virgin said that it had had made the application independently. If it was successful, it would manage the trains itself. When Virgin Trains lost the contract, it had provided almost 500 million journeys. Sir Richard said at the time that he was ""devastated"". Its partner, Stagecoach had been disqualified from bidding for that franchise as well as two others because, according to the DfT, it did not meet rules about pensions and future funding. Just last year, Sir Richard had hinted that he wanted to get into the rail business. He told the Financial Times in December: “I would not be surprised if one day Virgin is not back in trains.” A spokesperson for the group said: “Virgin is exceptionally proud of everything Virgin Trains and its wonderful onboard teams achieved in the UK. ""We’re confident customers would welcome Virgin Trains back, providing them with much-needed choice and competition.” ",BBC,19/05/2024,"['Virgin Trains could return to running rail services on the West Coast route between London and Glasgow five years after losing the franchise.', 'It means that Virgin would be competing with Avanti West Coast, the train company it lost the contract to in 2019.', 'Virgin Trains had operated the service, which runs from London Euston via Birmingham and Manchester to Scotland, for 22 years before it was disqualified from bidding for the franchise.', 'Virgin Group confirmed to the BBC that it had applied to the Office of Rail and Road, the regulator, for an Open Access licence.', 'Under this type of licence, a firm does not receive any state subsidies and takes on the risk of running a rail service itself.', 'In contrast, a franchised operator, such as Avanti, holds a contact with the government to run the route.', 'A spokesperson for Virgin Group said: ""While this application is just the first step towards exploring what might be possible, we think Open Access is the way forward. ""', 'Open Access increases consumer choice and competition both of which Virgin has always supported.""', 'Since taking over the franchise, Avanti has faced fierce criticism over delays and cancellations.', ""Last September, the Department for Transport (DfT) renewed Avanti West Coast's contract for up to nine years."", 'The company is a joint venture between FirstGroup and Trenitalia, an Italian train operator.', 'But in March this year, Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham called for Avanti to be stripped of the contract. “', 'I’ve completely run out of patience.', 'I cannot accept this railway line being left in this perennial state of chaos,” he said.', 'The DfT ruled out such a move, stating that it ""would just cause more upheaval for passengers rather than solving the challenges the operator is facing"".', 'Virgin Group said that it has applied to run services between London Euston to Preston and Rochdale via Manchester and Bolton in the north west as well as to Birmingham, Liverpool and Glasgow.', ""The previous train company was a joint venture between Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Group and Stagecoach, the Scottish bus and rail company."", 'But a spokesperson for Virgin said that it had had made the application independently.', 'If it was successful, it would manage the trains itself.', 'When Virgin Trains lost the contract, it had provided almost 500 million journeys.', 'Sir Richard said at the time that he was ""devastated"".', 'Its partner, Stagecoach had been disqualified from bidding for that franchise as well as two others because, according to the DfT, it did not meet rules about pensions and future funding.', 'Just last year, Sir Richard had hinted that he wanted to get into the rail business.', 'He told the Financial Times in December: “I would not be surprised if one day Virgin is not back in trains.”', 'A spokesperson for the group said: “Virgin is exceptionally proud of everything Virgin Trains and its wonderful onboard teams achieved in the UK. ""', 'We’re confident customers would welcome Virgin Trains back, providing them with much-needed choice and competition.”']",-0.0080180115134046,"A spokesperson for the group said: “Virgin is exceptionally proud of everything Virgin Trains and its wonderful onboard teams achieved in the UK. ""","I cannot accept this railway line being left in this perennial state of chaos,” he said.",-0.0019230991601943,"We’re confident customers would welcome Virgin Trains back, providing them with much-needed choice and competition.”","The DfT ruled out such a move, stating that it ""would just cause more upheaval for passengers rather than solving the challenges the operator is facing"".",2024-05-19 Who is Paula Vennells? Ex-Post Office boss in Horizon IT inquiry,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cjq5g95e8vpo,2024-05-16T12:42:46.588Z,"Ex-Post Office boss Paula Vennells is set to give evidence next week as part of the inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal. Ms Vennells was chief executive of the Post Office from 2012 to 2019, which included the last few years of the scandal. Between 1999 and 2015, more than 900 sub-postmasters were wrongly prosecuted after faulty software said money was missing from Post Office branch accounts. Despite living a relatively private life, Ms Vennells, 65, is now one of the most recognisable faces of the scandal. Earlier this year, she was portrayed by actress Lia Williams in the ITV drama Mr Bates Vs The Post Office. Since the programme aired, she has only been spotted once in public, refusing to answer questions from a Channel 4 reporter on whether there had been a cover-up at the Post Office, as she cycled away from a church cemetery. The ITV drama also highlighted her position as an ordained priest - a role she pursued before she joined the Post Office - having trained as a Church of England deacon between 2002 and 2005 before eventually becoming ordained in 2006. Ms Vennells served at several churches in Bedfordshire and was interviewed for the position of the Bishop of London in 2017. She relinquished her clerical duties in 2021 but remains an ordained priest. Ms Vennells grew up in the north west of England and went to the University of Bradford to study French, Russian and Economics, where she met her future husband John Vennells. After graduating in 1981, she took the first step in her business career with a job at Unilever. She went on to work in management positions at big brands such as Argos, Dixons, L'Oréal, Morrisons, Dunelm and Whitbread. After leaving the Post Office in 2019, she acted as a non-executive board member at the Cabinet Office for a year, and also became chairman of Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust but left this post in December 2020 citing personal reasons. But it is her role at the Post Office that is under scrutiny. Ms Vennells joined the Post Office in 2007 as a group network director, and was promoted to chief executive in 2012, the same year that the Post Office split from Royal Mail. During her time at the Post Office there were periods of financial struggle, which forced thousands of post offices across the country to close. Many that remained were modernised and the Post Office went from losing millions a year to making a profit. Ms Vennells was photographed visiting several of the modernised branches and meeting those who ran them. In pictures, she is nearly always seen wearing her staple pearl earrings. During her time leading the Post Office, Ms Vennells earned a total of £5.1m, peaking in 2018 when she took home £718,300 in salary, bonuses, pensions and other benefits. Ms Vennells faced increasing criticism and scrutiny of how she dealt with the investigation into the Horizon software while she worked at the Post Office. She is widely quoted as calling the Horizon computer system ""robust"". The last time she spoke publicly about the scandal was nearly a decade ago, in 2015, when she was questioned by a committee of MPs. Former chancellor Nadhim Zahawi was on the Commons business committee at the time, and notably played himself for free when the scene was recreated in the ITV drama. He asked Ms Vennells why emails from 2009 were not given to private investigators and whether they would be. Ms Vennells said: ""We have shared whatever information is appropriate."" However, private investigator Ian Henderson denied that this was the case. Ms Vennells stepped down from the Post Office in 2019. At the start of that year she appeared on the New Years Honours List and was awarded a CBE for services to the Post Office and to charity. But by December 2019, the High Court had concluded that the faulty Horizon software was to blame for shortfalls in branch accounts. And as the ITV drama brought more national outrage over the Horizon scandal, this year legislation was introduced to overturn all sub-postmasters' convictions. Ms Vennells handed back her CBE in January this year, saying she was listening to ""calls from sub-postmasters and others"" to return the honour. Those same sub-postmasters and others will eagerly await her testimony before the inquiry, where she is scheduled to appear for three days starting on Wednesday 23 May. ",BBC,16/05/2024,"['Ex-Post Office boss Paula Vennells is set to give evidence next week as part of the inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal.', 'Ms Vennells was chief executive of the Post Office from 2012 to 2019, which included the last few years of the scandal.', 'Between 1999 and 2015, more than 900 sub-postmasters were wrongly prosecuted after faulty software said money was missing from Post Office branch accounts.', 'Despite living a relatively private life, Ms Vennells, 65, is now one of the most recognisable faces of the scandal.', 'Earlier this year, she was portrayed by actress Lia Williams in the ITV drama Mr Bates Vs The Post Office.', 'Since the programme aired, she has only been spotted once in public, refusing to answer questions from a Channel 4 reporter on whether there had been a cover-up at the Post Office, as she cycled away from a church cemetery.', 'The ITV drama also highlighted her position as an ordained priest - a role she pursued before she joined the Post Office - having trained as a Church of England deacon between 2002 and 2005 before eventually becoming ordained in 2006.', 'Ms Vennells served at several churches in Bedfordshire and was interviewed for the position of the Bishop of London in 2017.', 'She relinquished her clerical duties in 2021 but remains an ordained priest.', 'Ms Vennells grew up in the north west of England and went to the University of Bradford to study French, Russian and Economics, where she met her future husband John Vennells.', 'After graduating in 1981, she took the first step in her business career with a job at Unilever.', ""She went on to work in management positions at big brands such as Argos, Dixons, L'Oréal, Morrisons, Dunelm and Whitbread."", 'After leaving the Post Office in 2019, she acted as a non-executive board member at the Cabinet Office for a year, and also became chairman of Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust but left this post in December 2020 citing personal reasons.', 'But it is her role at the Post Office that is under scrutiny.', 'Ms Vennells joined the Post Office in 2007 as a group network director, and was promoted to chief executive in 2012, the same year that the Post Office split from Royal Mail.', 'During her time at the Post Office there were periods of financial struggle, which forced thousands of post offices across the country to close.', 'Many that remained were modernised and the Post Office went from losing millions a year to making a profit.', 'Ms Vennells was photographed visiting several of the modernised branches and meeting those who ran them.', 'In pictures, she is nearly always seen wearing her staple pearl earrings.', 'During her time leading the Post Office, Ms Vennells earned a total of £5.1m, peaking in 2018 when she took home £718,300 in salary, bonuses, pensions and other benefits.', 'Ms Vennells faced increasing criticism and scrutiny of how she dealt with the investigation into the Horizon software while she worked at the Post Office.', 'She is widely quoted as calling the Horizon computer system ""robust"".', 'The last time she spoke publicly about the scandal was nearly a decade ago, in 2015, when she was questioned by a committee of MPs.', 'Former chancellor Nadhim Zahawi was on the Commons business committee at the time, and notably played himself for free when the scene was recreated in the ITV drama.', 'He asked Ms Vennells why emails from 2009 were not given to private investigators and whether they would be.', 'Ms Vennells said: ""We have shared whatever information is appropriate.""', 'However, private investigator Ian Henderson denied that this was the case.', 'Ms Vennells stepped down from the Post Office in 2019.', 'At the start of that year she appeared on the New Years Honours List and was awarded a CBE for services to the Post Office and to charity.', 'But by December 2019, the High Court had concluded that the faulty Horizon software was to blame for shortfalls in branch accounts.', ""And as the ITV drama brought more national outrage over the Horizon scandal, this year legislation was introduced to overturn all sub-postmasters' convictions."", 'Ms Vennells handed back her CBE in January this year, saying she was listening to ""calls from sub-postmasters and others"" to return the honour.', 'Those same sub-postmasters and others will eagerly await her testimony before the inquiry, where she is scheduled to appear for three days starting on Wednesday 23 May.']",-0.037039348736522,At the start of that year she appeared on the New Years Honours List and was awarded a CBE for services to the Post Office and to charity.,"And as the ITV drama brought more national outrage over the Horizon scandal, this year legislation was introduced to overturn all sub-postmasters' convictions.",-0.1830947756767273,"During her time leading the Post Office, Ms Vennells earned a total of £5.1m, peaking in 2018 when she took home £718,300 in salary, bonuses, pensions and other benefits.","But by December 2019, the High Court had concluded that the faulty Horizon software was to blame for shortfalls in branch accounts.",2024-05-19 Reddit-OpenAI deal: ChatGPT gets access to social media platform,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cxe92v47850o,2024-05-17T02:24:57.636Z,"Shares in Reddit have jumped more than 10% after the firm said it had struck a partnership deal with artificial intelligence (AI) start-up OpenAI. Under the agreement, the company behind the ChatGPT chatbot will get access to Reddit content, while it will also bring AI-powered features to the social media platform. The announcement highlights Reddit's efforts to broaden its income sources away from advertising. The deal also comes as a growing number of copyright owners mount legal challenges over the use of their material by AI firms. On Thursday Sony - which is the largest music publisher in the world - sent letters to Google, Microsoft and OpenAI demanding to know if they had used its songs to develop AI systems. The BBC has approached Google, Microsoft and OpenAI for comment. In recent months OpenAI has also agreed deals with several publishers, including the Associated Press and the Financial Times. Meanwhile, Google announced a partnership in February which allows the technology giant to access Reddit data to train its AI models. Both in the European Union and US, there are questions around whether it is copyright infringement to train AI tools on such content, or whether it falls under fair use and ""temporary copying"" exceptions. The issue is being tested in court in the US, in several legal cases separately representing people like Game of Thrones author George RR Martin, comedian Sarah Silverman, and the New York Times. This week, OpenAI unveiled the latest version of the technology which underpins ChatGPT. The firm said GPT-4o will be rolled out to all users of ChatGPT, including non-subscribers. It is faster than earlier models and has been programmed to sound conversational in its responses to prompts. The new version can read and discuss images, translate languages, and identify emotions from visual expressions. There is also memory so it can recall previous prompts. ",BBC,17/05/2024,"['Shares in Reddit have jumped more than 10% after the firm said it had struck a partnership deal with artificial intelligence (AI) start-up OpenAI.', 'Under the agreement, the company behind the ChatGPT chatbot will get access to Reddit content, while it will also bring AI-powered features to the social media platform.', ""The announcement highlights Reddit's efforts to broaden its income sources away from advertising."", 'The deal also comes as a growing number of copyright owners mount legal challenges over the use of their material by AI firms.', 'On Thursday Sony - which is the largest music publisher in the world - sent letters to Google, Microsoft and OpenAI demanding to know if they had used its songs to develop AI systems.', 'The BBC has approached Google, Microsoft and OpenAI for comment.', 'In recent months OpenAI has also agreed deals with several publishers, including the Associated Press and the Financial Times.', 'Meanwhile, Google announced a partnership in February which allows the technology giant to access Reddit data to train its AI models.', 'Both in the European Union and US, there are questions around whether it is copyright infringement to train AI tools on such content, or whether it falls under fair use and ""temporary copying"" exceptions.', 'The issue is being tested in court in the US, in several legal cases separately representing people like Game of Thrones author George RR Martin, comedian Sarah Silverman, and the New York Times.', 'This week, OpenAI unveiled the latest version of the technology which underpins ChatGPT.', 'The firm said GPT-4o will be rolled out to all users of ChatGPT, including non-subscribers.', 'It is faster than earlier models and has been programmed to sound conversational in its responses to prompts.', 'The new version can read and discuss images, translate languages, and identify emotions from visual expressions.', 'There is also memory so it can recall previous prompts.']",0.1300922676733971,"The issue is being tested in court in the US, in several legal cases separately representing people like Game of Thrones author George RR Martin, comedian Sarah Silverman, and the New York Times.","On Thursday Sony - which is the largest music publisher in the world - sent letters to Google, Microsoft and OpenAI demanding to know if they had used its songs to develop AI systems.",0.9371194044748942,Shares in Reddit have jumped more than 10% after the firm said it had struck a partnership deal with artificial intelligence (AI) start-up OpenAI.,,2024-05-19 AI 'godfather' says universal basic income will be needed,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cnd607ekl99o,2024-05-18T13:18:15.919Z,"The computer scientist regarded as the “godfather of artificial intelligence” says the government will have to establish a universal basic income to deal with the impact of AI on inequality. Professor Geoffrey Hinton told BBC Newsnight that a benefits reform giving fixed amounts of cash to every citizen would be needed because he was “very worried about AI taking lots of mundane jobs”. “I was consulted by people in Downing Street and I advised them that universal basic income was a good idea,” he said. He said while he felt AI would increase productivity and wealth, the money would go to the rich “and not the people whose jobs get lost and that’s going to be very bad for society”. Professor Hinton is the pioneer of neural networks, which form the theoretical basis of the current explosion in artificial intelligence. Until last year he worked at Google, but left the tech giant so he could talk more freely about the dangers from unregulated AI. The concept of a universal basic income amounts to the government paying all individuals a set salary regardless of their means. Critics say it would be extremely costly and divert funding away from public services, while not necessarily helping to alleviate poverty. A government spokesman said there were ""no plans to introduce a universal basic income"". Professor Hinton reiterated his concern that there were human extinction-level threats emerging. Developments over the last year showed governments were unwilling to rein in military use of AI, he said, while the competition to develop products rapidly meant there was a risk tech companies wouldn't “put enough effort into safety”. Professor Hinton said ""my guess is in between five and 20 years from now there’s a probability of half that we’ll have to confront the problem of AI trying to take over"". This would lead to an “extinction-level threat” for humans because we could have “created a form of intelligence that is just better than biological intelligence… That's very worrying for us”. AI could “evolve”, he said, “to get the motivation to make more of itself” and could autonomously “develop a sub-goal of getting control”. He said there was already evidence of large language models - a type of AI algorithm used to generate text - choosing to be deceptive. He said recent applications of AI to generate thousands of military targets were the “thin end of the wedge”. “What I’m most concerned about is when these can autonomously make the decision to kill people,"" he said. Professor Hinton said something similar to the Geneva Conventions - the international treaties that establish legal standards for humanitarian treatment in war - may be needed to regulate the military use of AI. ""But I don't think that's going to happen until after very nasty things have happened,” he added. Asked if the West was in a Manhattan Project-style race - referring to nuclear weapons research during World War Two - with autocracies such as Russia and China on the military use of AI, Professor Hinton replied: “[Russian President Vladimir] Putin said some years ago that whoever controls AI controls the world. So I imagine they're working very hard. ""Fortunately, the West is probably well ahead of them in research. We're probably still slightly ahead of China. But China's putting more resources in. And so in terms of military uses I think there's going to be a race”. He said a better solution would be a prohibition on military uses of AI. ",BBC,18/05/2024,"['The computer scientist regarded as the “godfather of artificial intelligence” says the government will have to establish a universal basic income to deal with the impact of AI on inequality.', 'Professor Geoffrey Hinton told BBC Newsnight that a benefits reform giving fixed amounts of cash to every citizen would be needed because he was “very worried about AI taking lots of mundane jobs”. “', 'I was consulted by people in Downing Street and I advised them that universal basic income was a good idea,” he said.', 'He said while he felt AI would increase productivity and wealth, the money would go to the rich “and not the people whose jobs get lost and that’s going to be very bad for society”.', 'Professor Hinton is the pioneer of neural networks, which form the theoretical basis of the current explosion in artificial intelligence.', 'Until last year he worked at Google, but left the tech giant so he could talk more freely about the dangers from unregulated AI.', 'The concept of a universal basic income amounts to the government paying all individuals a set salary regardless of their means.', 'Critics say it would be extremely costly and divert funding away from public services, while not necessarily helping to alleviate poverty.', 'A government spokesman said there were ""no plans to introduce a universal basic income"".', 'Professor Hinton reiterated his concern that there were human extinction-level threats emerging.', ""Developments over the last year showed governments were unwilling to rein in military use of AI, he said, while the competition to develop products rapidly meant there was a risk tech companies wouldn't “put enough effort into safety”."", 'Professor Hinton said ""my guess is in between five and 20 years from now there’s a probability of half that we’ll have to confront the problem of AI trying to take over"".', ""This would lead to an “extinction-level threat” for humans because we could have “created a form of intelligence that is just better than biological intelligence… That's very worrying for us”."", 'AI could “evolve”, he said, “to get the motivation to make more of itself” and could autonomously “develop a sub-goal of getting control”.', 'He said there was already evidence of large language models - a type of AI algorithm used to generate text - choosing to be deceptive.', 'He said recent applications of AI to generate thousands of military targets were the “thin end of the wedge”. “', 'What I’m most concerned about is when these can autonomously make the decision to kill people,"" he said.', 'Professor Hinton said something similar to the Geneva Conventions - the international treaties that establish legal standards for humanitarian treatment in war - may be needed to regulate the military use of AI. ""', ""But I don't think that's going to happen until after very nasty things have happened,” he added."", 'Asked if the West was in a Manhattan Project-style race - referring to nuclear weapons research during World War Two - with autocracies such as Russia and China on the military use of AI, Professor Hinton replied: “[Russian President Vladimir] Putin said some years ago that whoever controls AI controls the world.', 'So I imagine they\'re working very hard. ""', 'Fortunately, the West is probably well ahead of them in research.', ""We're probably still slightly ahead of China."", ""But China's putting more resources in."", ""And so in terms of military uses I think there's going to be a race”."", 'He said a better solution would be a prohibition on military uses of AI.']",-0.027017192741244,He said a better solution would be a prohibition on military uses of AI.,"Critics say it would be extremely costly and divert funding away from public services, while not necessarily helping to alleviate poverty.",0.1888855174183845,"He said while he felt AI would increase productivity and wealth, the money would go to the rich “and not the people whose jobs get lost and that’s going to be very bad for society”.","Developments over the last year showed governments were unwilling to rein in military use of AI, he said, while the competition to develop products rapidly meant there was a risk tech companies wouldn't “put enough effort into safety”.",2024-05-19 Business locked in expensive AI 'arms race',https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cx7dx48ev91o,2024-05-16T23:13:50.076Z,"There’s no doubt we’re in an AI arms race says Jon Collins. He’s worked in IT for 35 years in various roles, including as a software programmer, systems manager and chief technology officer. He’s now an industry analyst for research firm Gigaom. The current arms race was spurred by the launch of ChatGPT at the end of 2022, says Mr Collins. Since then, many such generative AI systems have emerged, and millions of people use them every day to create artwork, text or video. For business leaders the stakes are high. Generative AI systems are very powerful tools that can digest more data in minutes than a human could in several lifetimes. Suddenly company leaders are aware what AI could allow them, and their competition, to achieve, Mr Collins explained. “Fear and greed is driving it,” he says. “And that creates an avalanche of momentum.” With the right training a customised AI system could allow a company to leap ahead of its rivals with a research breakthrough, or by cutting costs by automating work currently done by humans. In the pharmaceuticals sector, firms are customising AI to help them discover new compounds to treat disease. But it’s an expensive process. “You need data scientists, and you need model engineers,” explains Mr Collins. Those scientists and engineers need to understand, at least to some extent, the area of pharmaceuticals that the AI will be working in. And it does not stop there. “You need the infrastructure engineers that can build your AI platforms,” he continues. Such highly skilled workers are not easy to come by. There are just not enough people who “understand how to make these systems, how to make them really perform, and how to solve some of the challenges going forward,” says Andrew Rogoyski, director of innovation at the Surrey Institute for People-Centred AI at the University of Surrey. Salaries for those who can tackle these challenges have hit “ludicrous” levels, he adds, because they are so important. “We could produce hundreds of AI PhDs, if we had the capacity, because people would give them jobs.” Beyond the skills shortages, just gaining access to the physical infrastructure needed for large scale AI can be a challenge. The sort of computer systems needed to run an AI for cancer drug research would typically require between two and three thousand of the latest computer chips. The cost of such computer hardware alone could easily come in at upwards of $60m (£48m), even before costs for other essentials such as data storage and networking. Part of the problem for business is that this kind of AI has appeared rather abruptly. Previous technology, like the emergence of the internet, was built up more slowly. A big bank, pharmaceutical firm or manufacturer might have the resources to buy in the tech it needs to take advantage of the latest AI, but what about a smaller firm? Italian start-up Restworld is a recruitment website for catering staff, with a database of 100,000 workers. Chief technology officer Edoardo Conte was keen to see if AI could benefit the business. The firm considered building an AI-driven chatbot to communicate with users of the service. But Mr Conte said that, across thousands of users, “The cost grows very much.” Instead, it looked at a narrower problem – the issue that candidates don’t always present their experience in the best way. For example, a candidate might not list waitering as a skill. But the algorithms Mr Conte developed make it easier to uncover additional information, including whether they had applied for and gained a waiting role in the past. “The AI can deduce that they’re a waiter, or they might be interested in other waiter job offers,” he says. One roadblock in hospitality recruitment is getting candidates to the interview stage. So, Mr Conte’s next challenge is to use AI to automate and customise the interview process for its candidates. The AI might even conduct a “conversation” with candidates and produce summaries to pass onto recruiters. It might speed up the whole process, which currently can take days, in which time a waiter or chef might have found another job. In the meantime, larger firms will continue to pour cash into AI projects, even if it’s not always clear what they’re likely to achieve. As Mr Rogoyski says, the adoption of AI is in a “Darwinian, experimental phase,” and it’s difficult to see what the consequences will be. “That's where it gets interesting. But I kind of think that we have to go with it,” he says, before adding “I'm not sure we get a choice.” ",BBC,16/05/2024,"['There’s no doubt we’re in an AI arms race says Jon Collins.', 'He’s worked in IT for 35 years in various roles, including as a software programmer, systems manager and chief technology officer.', 'He’s now an industry analyst for research firm Gigaom.', 'The current arms race was spurred by the launch of ChatGPT at the end of 2022, says Mr Collins.', 'Since then, many such generative AI systems have emerged, and millions of people use them every day to create artwork, text or video.', 'For business leaders the stakes are high.', 'Generative AI systems are very powerful tools that can digest more data in minutes than a human could in several lifetimes.', 'Suddenly company leaders are aware what AI could allow them, and their competition, to achieve, Mr Collins explained. “', 'Fear and greed is driving it,” he says. “', 'And that creates an avalanche of momentum.”', 'With the right training a customised AI system could allow a company to leap ahead of its rivals with a research breakthrough, or by cutting costs by automating work currently done by humans.', 'In the pharmaceuticals sector, firms are customising AI to help them discover new compounds to treat disease.', 'But it’s an expensive process. “', 'You need data scientists, and you need model engineers,” explains Mr Collins.', 'Those scientists and engineers need to understand, at least to some extent, the area of pharmaceuticals that the AI will be working in.', 'And it does not stop there. “', 'You need the infrastructure engineers that can build your AI platforms,” he continues.', 'Such highly skilled workers are not easy to come by.', 'There are just not enough people who “understand how to make these systems, how to make them really perform, and how to solve some of the challenges going forward,” says Andrew Rogoyski, director of innovation at the Surrey Institute for People-Centred AI at the University of Surrey.', 'Salaries for those who can tackle these challenges have hit “ludicrous” levels, he adds, because they are so important. “', 'We could produce hundreds of AI PhDs, if we had the capacity, because people would give them jobs.”', 'Beyond the skills shortages, just gaining access to the physical infrastructure needed for large scale AI can be a challenge.', 'The sort of computer systems needed to run an AI for cancer drug research would typically require between two and three thousand of the latest computer chips.', 'The cost of such computer hardware alone could easily come in at upwards of $60m (£48m), even before costs for other essentials such as data storage and networking.', 'Part of the problem for business is that this kind of AI has appeared rather abruptly.', 'Previous technology, like the emergence of the internet, was built up more slowly.', 'A big bank, pharmaceutical firm or manufacturer might have the resources to buy in the tech it needs to take advantage of the latest AI, but what about a smaller firm?', 'Italian start-up Restworld is a recruitment website for catering staff, with a database of 100,000 workers.', 'Chief technology officer Edoardo Conte was keen to see if AI could benefit the business.', 'The firm considered building an AI-driven chatbot to communicate with users of the service.', 'But Mr Conte said that, across thousands of users, “The cost grows very much.”', 'Instead, it looked at a narrower problem – the issue that candidates don’t always present their experience in the best way.', 'For example, a candidate might not list waitering as a skill.', 'But the algorithms Mr Conte developed make it easier to uncover additional information, including whether they had applied for and gained a waiting role in the past. “', 'The AI can deduce that they’re a waiter, or they might be interested in other waiter job offers,” he says.', 'One roadblock in hospitality recruitment is getting candidates to the interview stage.', 'So, Mr Conte’s next challenge is to use AI to automate and customise the interview process for its candidates.', 'The AI might even conduct a “conversation” with candidates and produce summaries to pass onto recruiters.', 'It might speed up the whole process, which currently can take days, in which time a waiter or chef might have found another job.', 'In the meantime, larger firms will continue to pour cash into AI projects, even if it’s not always clear what they’re likely to achieve.', 'As Mr Rogoyski says, the adoption of AI is in a “Darwinian, experimental phase,” and it’s difficult to see what the consequences will be. “', ""That's where it gets interesting."", ""But I kind of think that we have to go with it,” he says, before adding “I'm not sure we get a choice.”""]",0.0969558261671527,"But the algorithms Mr Conte developed make it easier to uncover additional information, including whether they had applied for and gained a waiting role in the past. “","Fear and greed is driving it,” he says. “",0.2068856596946716,"With the right training a customised AI system could allow a company to leap ahead of its rivals with a research breakthrough, or by cutting costs by automating work currently done by humans.","But Mr Conte said that, across thousands of users, “The cost grows very much.”",2024-05-19 Post Office: Fujitsu sacked top boss at height of Horizon scandal,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-68936973,2024-05-19T00:41:54.000Z,"Fujitsu, the company that built the flawed Horizon IT system, sacked a top boss at the height of the scandal. Rod Vawdrey, 67, was dismissed as Fujitsu's global president in 2014 for personal conduct issues, former colleagues say. He returned to his native Australia, where he is now being sued for his involvement in a ""train wreck"" stock market float which made him millions. Mr Vawdrey told the BBC he wasn't involved in the Horizon project. Mr Vawdrey had responsibility for the UK operation from 2011 to 2014 - a crucial time in the Horizon scandal. If the Horizon issue was discussed by the UK board, Mr Vawdrey must have been aware of it. Companies House filings say he was executive chairman of Fujitsu Services Ltd, the UK company and sat on its audit and corporate governance committees. At this time details were beginning to emerge in public, with MPs and journalists raising concerns. But until 2013 the Post Office was still prosecuting dozens of people every year based on evidence from the flawed branch computer system. Alarm bells were ringing internally too. In 2013, a barrister warned the Post Office that a Fujitsu employee was giving incomplete evidence in court, failing to disclose information about bugs in his witness statements. This was a crucial turning point in the story, but neither Fujitsu nor the Post Office came clean about problems with Horizon until years later, piling yet more suffering on the hundreds who had been unfairly convicted. Mr Vawdrey was the only Westerner on the main Fujitsu board, with responsibility for its operations outside Japan, including the UK which was an important market. Two well-placed former colleagues of Mr Vawdrey told the BBC that he was ""terminated for cause"" by the company early in 2014. This was due to personal conduct issues, not anything related to Horizon, the sources allege, including running up too many expenses. ""Living high on the hog,"" as one put it. One described his management style as ""rumbustious"", sometimes shouting at colleagues - either a ""bulldog"" or a ""bully"", depending on which side you were on; the other source agreed. His tenure was relatively brief - a little more than two years - and Fujitsu's UK accounts show no record of a departure payment to Mr Vawdrey, unlike the multimillion-pound sums paid to departing bosses before and afterwards. Mr Vawdrey is not currently due to appear at the Horizon Inquiry, though it will hear from Duncan Tait, who was UK chief executive and reported to him. Foreign nationals can give evidence, but the Inquiry has no powers to compel them unless they return to the UK. After Fujitsu, Mr Vawdrey moved back to Australia and was involved in another public scandal, which left him a very wealthy man. After a break, Mr Vawdrey joined what was then a small Australian start-up, a software company called Nuix, and became chief executive in 2017. It was a considerable commercial success, and launched on the Australian stock exchange in December 2020, the biggest market debut of the year, and many private investors bought in. Mr Vawdrey himself took home nearly AUS$28m (£15m; $18m) in cash straight away, and was left with another AUS$8m worth of shares. However, within months the share price collapsed, leaving many investors sitting on big losses. Mr Vawdrey resigned on 15 June 2021, and the following week Australian police raided the company HQ. Last year Rolf Krolke, a former senior executive-turned-whistleblower, told an investigation by the Australian parliament that the Nuix float was a ""train wreck waiting to happen"". Nuix said it ""rejects"" his assertions. The stock exchange regulator, ASIC, is now taking Nuix and its board, including Mr Vawdrey, to court for allegedly ""breaking continuous disclosure laws"" and ""breaching their director's duties"". The case was heard last December and the court has yet to reach a decision, ASIC said. In an email statement Nuix said: ""Nuix and the relevant directors have disputed the matters which are the subject of the ASIC proceeding."" Mr Vawdrey said: ""I'm not interested in talking to journalists about [Horizon], I wasn't involved,"" and gave no further comment on the detailed allegations put to him. Fujitsu declined to comment. ",BBC,19/05/2024,"['Fujitsu, the company that built the flawed Horizon IT system, sacked a top boss at the height of the scandal.', ""Rod Vawdrey, 67, was dismissed as Fujitsu's global president in 2014 for personal conduct issues, former colleagues say."", 'He returned to his native Australia, where he is now being sued for his involvement in a ""train wreck"" stock market float which made him millions.', ""Mr Vawdrey told the BBC he wasn't involved in the Horizon project."", 'Mr Vawdrey had responsibility for the UK operation from 2011 to 2014 - a crucial time in the Horizon scandal.', 'If the Horizon issue was discussed by the UK board, Mr Vawdrey must have been aware of it.', 'Companies House filings say he was executive chairman of Fujitsu Services Ltd, the UK company and sat on its audit and corporate governance committees.', 'At this time details were beginning to emerge in public, with MPs and journalists raising concerns.', 'But until 2013 the Post Office was still prosecuting dozens of people every year based on evidence from the flawed branch computer system.', 'Alarm bells were ringing internally too.', 'In 2013, a barrister warned the Post Office that a Fujitsu employee was giving incomplete evidence in court, failing to disclose information about bugs in his witness statements.', 'This was a crucial turning point in the story, but neither Fujitsu nor the Post Office came clean about problems with Horizon until years later, piling yet more suffering on the hundreds who had been unfairly convicted.', 'Mr Vawdrey was the only Westerner on the main Fujitsu board, with responsibility for its operations outside Japan, including the UK which was an important market.', 'Two well-placed former colleagues of Mr Vawdrey told the BBC that he was ""terminated for cause"" by the company early in 2014.', 'This was due to personal conduct issues, not anything related to Horizon, the sources allege, including running up too many expenses. ""', 'Living high on the hog,"" as one put it.', 'One described his management style as ""rumbustious"", sometimes shouting at colleagues - either a ""bulldog"" or a ""bully"", depending on which side you were on; the other source agreed.', ""His tenure was relatively brief - a little more than two years - and Fujitsu's UK accounts show no record of a departure payment to Mr Vawdrey, unlike the multimillion-pound sums paid to departing bosses before and afterwards."", 'Mr Vawdrey is not currently due to appear at the Horizon Inquiry, though it will hear from Duncan Tait, who was UK chief executive and reported to him.', 'Foreign nationals can give evidence, but the Inquiry has no powers to compel them unless they return to the UK.', 'After Fujitsu, Mr Vawdrey moved back to Australia and was involved in another public scandal, which left him a very wealthy man.', 'After a break, Mr Vawdrey joined what was then a small Australian start-up, a software company called Nuix, and became chief executive in 2017.', 'It was a considerable commercial success, and launched on the Australian stock exchange in December 2020, the biggest market debut of the year, and many private investors bought in.', 'Mr Vawdrey himself took home nearly AUS$28m (£15m; $18m) in cash straight away, and was left with another AUS$8m worth of shares.', 'However, within months the share price collapsed, leaving many investors sitting on big losses.', 'Mr Vawdrey resigned on 15 June 2021, and the following week Australian police raided the company HQ.', 'Last year Rolf Krolke, a former senior executive-turned-whistleblower, told an investigation by the Australian parliament that the Nuix float was a ""train wreck waiting to happen"".', 'Nuix said it ""rejects"" his assertions.', 'The stock exchange regulator, ASIC, is now taking Nuix and its board, including Mr Vawdrey, to court for allegedly ""breaking continuous disclosure laws"" and ""breaching their director\'s duties"".', 'The case was heard last December and the court has yet to reach a decision, ASIC said.', 'In an email statement Nuix said: ""Nuix and the relevant directors have disputed the matters which are the subject of the ASIC proceeding.""', 'Mr Vawdrey said: ""I\'m not interested in talking to journalists about [Horizon], I wasn\'t involved,"" and gave no further comment on the detailed allegations put to him.', 'Fujitsu declined to comment.']",-0.1601193328755878,"It was a considerable commercial success, and launched on the Australian stock exchange in December 2020, the biggest market debut of the year, and many private investors bought in.","This was a crucial turning point in the story, but neither Fujitsu nor the Post Office came clean about problems with Horizon until years later, piling yet more suffering on the hundreds who had been unfairly convicted.",-0.5856678996767316,"It was a considerable commercial success, and launched on the Australian stock exchange in December 2020, the biggest market debut of the year, and many private investors bought in.","However, within months the share price collapsed, leaving many investors sitting on big losses.",2024-05-19 35-year mortgages: 'I had no choice but to get one',https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cn3dded32j2o,2024-05-19T00:47:54.856Z,"Young homebuyers are facing huge challenges when it comes to getting on - and staying on - the housing ladder. Nicola Webb, a 34-year-old nurse, felt she had little choice but to opt for an ultra-long mortgage when purchasing her first home last year. It's set to end when she is 68, but she says stretching out the repayments is ""the only way I can just about afford my mortgage as a single homeowner"". “I've not known lower mortgage rates so I just accept what it is.” Despite the fact that she managed to save a chunky deposit for her £147,000 two-bedroom flat in Gloucestershire, Nicola's five-year fixed rate mortgage costs £598 a month - about a third of her monthly wages after tax and student loan deductions. Once her student loan is paid off - or eventually written off - she hopes to reduce the length of her mortgage term from 35 years, or look at using any extra disposable income to overpay it. She says she's grateful she has been able to get on the housing ladder at all. While mortgage costs take up a large part of her income, she thinks it is still cheaper than renting in her local area. ""I was having no luck at all with renting... and for me it's all about trying to keep it as cheap as possible."" Recent figures suggest that Nicola's situation is becoming more and more common. Data from the Bank of England shows that hundreds of thousands of homeowners have taken out mortgages in the last three years that they will still be paying off into retirement. While longer mortgage terms might make repayments more affordable in the here and now, homeowners will be paying off more overall in interest. Some industry figures have also expressed concern that buyers may not be able to afford a mortgage once they retire and will raid their pension savings to clear their home loan, leaving them with less to live on in old age. But for some, a longer term of 35 or 40 years is seen as a temporary solution as they wait to see if mortgage rates will fall back from relative highs. Martin Tapper, a mortgage broker based in Essex, told the BBC that most of the first-time buyers he has advised this year have opted for 40-year terms. ""A young family can escape exorbitant rent costs in order to purchase a home where the mortgage cost is far cheaper on a longer term,"" he suggests. He adds he would only guide a client to these longer terms if they were the ""right kind"", saying he always recommends switching back to a shorter term later on if possible, for example if a client's wage has gone up or if they're moving home. And, he says, it is vital to get insurance to protect against payments becoming tricky if someone's health deteriorates or they lose their job. For 30-year-old Shane Lees, weighing up the pros and cons of an ultra-long mortgage has been a serious undertaking. He and his partner are remortgaging so that they can buy a three-bedroom house in West Sussex where they can start a family. After speaking to six or seven mortgage brokers, they have decided to choose a mortgage term of 35 years, dropping down to 25 years at the end of a two-year fixed deal. Shane says that he and his partner are now less likely to go for something at the top end of their budget due to the prospect of higher monthly repayments. They have opted for a lender Shane describes as ""realistic"", which would be willing to renegotiate at the end of the two-year fixed deal, while most were offering a rate of about 5.5%. The pressure faced by younger homeowners like Shane is pretty clear, with the sharp rise in the proportion of mortgages that run beyond state pension age. The number of homeowners aged under 30 taking out such mortgages more than doubled over the two-year period, while for those aged under 40 the number was up 30%. But Sarah Coles, head of personal finance at Hargreaves Lansdown, says people shouldn't bank on interest rates being lower when they come to reduce the term later. ""Economists are constantly changing their expectations for when the Bank of England will cut rates. ""Back in January some of them were predicting cuts as early as March, and now we’re expecting them this summer instead. Even then, cuts aren’t expected particularly rapidly, so anyone holding their breath for much lower rates will have quite a wait on their hands."" She suggests that those on a 35 or 40-year mortgage need not only a plan in place to pay it off, but also a plan B for life's ""unexpected twists and turns"". For example, if you're carrying your mortgage into retirement and expect to sell up and downsize to clear the debt, you need to think about what to do if you change your mind and want to stay in your home, she says. ""It can be exactly what people need to make their mortgage more affordable, but they need to appreciate the wider implications."" For homeowners like Shane, he appreciates there may be risks attached but feels he's in a lucky position to have this problem in the first place. Additional reporting by Bernadette McCague. Read more here ",BBC,19/05/2024,"['Young homebuyers are facing huge challenges when it comes to getting on - and staying on - the housing ladder.', 'Nicola Webb, a 34-year-old nurse, felt she had little choice but to opt for an ultra-long mortgage when purchasing her first home last year.', 'It\'s set to end when she is 68, but she says stretching out the repayments is ""the only way I can just about afford my mortgage as a single homeowner"". “', ""I've not known lower mortgage rates so I just accept what it is.”"", ""Despite the fact that she managed to save a chunky deposit for her £147,000 two-bedroom flat in Gloucestershire, Nicola's five-year fixed rate mortgage costs £598 a month - about a third of her monthly wages after tax and student loan deductions."", 'Once her student loan is paid off - or eventually written off - she hopes to reduce the length of her mortgage term from 35 years, or look at using any extra disposable income to overpay it.', ""She says she's grateful she has been able to get on the housing ladder at all."", 'While mortgage costs take up a large part of her income, she thinks it is still cheaper than renting in her local area. ""', 'I was having no luck at all with renting... and for me it\'s all about trying to keep it as cheap as possible.""', ""Recent figures suggest that Nicola's situation is becoming more and more common."", 'Data from the Bank of England shows that hundreds of thousands of homeowners have taken out mortgages in the last three years that they will still be paying off into retirement.', 'While longer mortgage terms might make repayments more affordable in the here and now, homeowners will be paying off more overall in interest.', 'Some industry figures have also expressed concern that buyers may not be able to afford a mortgage once they retire and will raid their pension savings to clear their home loan, leaving them with less to live on in old age.', 'But for some, a longer term of 35 or 40 years is seen as a temporary solution as they wait to see if mortgage rates will fall back from relative highs.', 'Martin Tapper, a mortgage broker based in Essex, told the BBC that most of the first-time buyers he has advised this year have opted for 40-year terms. ""', 'A young family can escape exorbitant rent costs in order to purchase a home where the mortgage cost is far cheaper on a longer term,"" he suggests.', 'He adds he would only guide a client to these longer terms if they were the ""right kind"", saying he always recommends switching back to a shorter term later on if possible, for example if a client\'s wage has gone up or if they\'re moving home.', ""And, he says, it is vital to get insurance to protect against payments becoming tricky if someone's health deteriorates or they lose their job."", 'For 30-year-old Shane Lees, weighing up the pros and cons of an ultra-long mortgage has been a serious undertaking.', 'He and his partner are remortgaging so that they can buy a three-bedroom house in West Sussex where they can start a family.', 'After speaking to six or seven mortgage brokers, they have decided to choose a mortgage term of 35 years, dropping down to 25 years at the end of a two-year fixed deal.', 'Shane says that he and his partner are now less likely to go for something at the top end of their budget due to the prospect of higher monthly repayments.', 'They have opted for a lender Shane describes as ""realistic"", which would be willing to renegotiate at the end of the two-year fixed deal, while most were offering a rate of about 5.5%.', 'The pressure faced by younger homeowners like Shane is pretty clear, with the sharp rise in the proportion of mortgages that run beyond state pension age.', 'The number of homeowners aged under 30 taking out such mortgages more than doubled over the two-year period, while for those aged under 40 the number was up 30%.', 'But Sarah Coles, head of personal finance at Hargreaves Lansdown, says people shouldn\'t bank on interest rates being lower when they come to reduce the term later. ""', 'Economists are constantly changing their expectations for when the Bank of England will cut rates. ""', 'Back in January some of them were predicting cuts as early as March, and now we’re expecting them this summer instead.', 'Even then, cuts aren’t expected particularly rapidly, so anyone holding their breath for much lower rates will have quite a wait on their hands.""', 'She suggests that those on a 35 or 40-year mortgage need not only a plan in place to pay it off, but also a plan B for life\'s ""unexpected twists and turns"".', 'For example, if you\'re carrying your mortgage into retirement and expect to sell up and downsize to clear the debt, you need to think about what to do if you change your mind and want to stay in your home, she says. ""', 'It can be exactly what people need to make their mortgage more affordable, but they need to appreciate the wider implications.""', ""For homeowners like Shane, he appreciates there may be risks attached but feels he's in a lucky position to have this problem in the first place."", 'Additional reporting by Bernadette McCague.', 'Read more here']",0.1786289152445031,"The pressure faced by younger homeowners like Shane is pretty clear, with the sharp rise in the proportion of mortgages that run beyond state pension age.","Even then, cuts aren’t expected particularly rapidly, so anyone holding their breath for much lower rates will have quite a wait on their hands.""",0.403078269213438,"The number of homeowners aged under 30 taking out such mortgages more than doubled over the two-year period, while for those aged under 40 the number was up 30%.","Some industry figures have also expressed concern that buyers may not be able to afford a mortgage once they retire and will raid their pension savings to clear their home loan, leaving them with less to live on in old age.",2024-05-19 Marks and Spencer website and app hit by technical issue,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cv22e5vx5djo,2024-05-18T16:43:01.215Z,"Customers were unable to use Marks and Spencer's website and app for several hours on Saturday after it was hit by a technical issue. The website and app were back up and running by 18:15 BST. During the outage, users saw an error message on the homepage and could not navigate to any part of the website. An M&S spokeswoman told the BBC a problem with a third party provider had been ""temporarily affecting access"". The company added it was ""sorry to customers for the inconvenience caused"". Problems with access to the website and app were first reported on X, formerly Twitter, from around lunchtime on Saturday. The website came back online after 17:00 BST, only to go back to the original error message a short time later, but it was up and running again before 18:00 BST. The app was still showing a notice about a technical glitch for a short while after but is now operating normally. Its notice read: ""Sorry you can't shop through the app right now. ""We're busy making some planned changes, but will be back soon."" Some customers complained on social media that they had been unable to use their Sparks card - the company's loyalty scheme - as they did not have a physical card and claimed they had lost out on savings. In March, supermarket Sainsbury's was also hit with technical issues. It was unable to carry out most of its online grocery orders after an overnight update caused contactless payments to fail. ",BBC,18/05/2024,"[""Customers were unable to use Marks and Spencer's website and app for several hours on Saturday after it was hit by a technical issue."", 'The website and app were back up and running by 18:15 BST.', 'During the outage, users saw an error message on the homepage and could not navigate to any part of the website.', 'An M&S spokeswoman told the BBC a problem with a third party provider had been ""temporarily affecting access"".', 'The company added it was ""sorry to customers for the inconvenience caused"".', 'Problems with access to the website and app were first reported on X, formerly Twitter, from around lunchtime on Saturday.', 'The website came back online after 17:00 BST, only to go back to the original error message a short time later, but it was up and running again before 18:00 BST.', 'The app was still showing a notice about a technical glitch for a short while after but is now operating normally.', 'Its notice read: ""Sorry you can\'t shop through the app right now. ""', 'We\'re busy making some planned changes, but will be back soon.""', ""Some customers complained on social media that they had been unable to use their Sparks card - the company's loyalty scheme - as they did not have a physical card and claimed they had lost out on savings."", ""In March, supermarket Sainsbury's was also hit with technical issues."", 'It was unable to carry out most of its online grocery orders after an overnight update caused contactless payments to fail.']",-0.1557287446900505,,It was unable to carry out most of its online grocery orders after an overnight update caused contactless payments to fail.,-0.9572318366595676,,Some customers complained on social media that they had been unable to use their Sparks card - the company's loyalty scheme - as they did not have a physical card and claimed they had lost out on savings.,2024-05-19 Pornhub partners with UK child abuse-fighting charity,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c9rzr4n17zpo,2024-05-16T23:06:29.530Z,"Pornhub's parent company Aylo has announced it has backed new standards of good practice for pornography sites on combating child abuse, drawn up by UK charity the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF). The IWF is a key part of the UK's fight against online child sexual abuse material (CSAM), enabling people and organisations to report suspected online child abuse content. It hopes the announcement will lead other porn websites to support the voluntary standards developed in partnership with Aylo over a period of 18 months. But campaigners have told the BBC the standards will only be successful if they lead to real change. The actions pornographic sites are expected to take include checks that users are over-18, but this could be simply asking users to declare that they are. But the standards also say they must obey the law and the UK Online Safety Act will soon require much more robust age checks than ticking a box, such as AI face-scanning tech that estimates age. Aylo has previously argued that forcing sites to check ages drives users to ""darker corners of the internet"" and has fought legal battles against US state laws requiring age verification. But now it says it will follow legal requirements. ""We will always comply with the law, and the Online Safety Act is no different, but it is clear from other jurisdictions that site-level age verification does not prevent children from accessing adult content online while creating data privacy issues and increasing exposure to unmoderated, harmful material"", it said. And it says it hopes that instead of age checks on sites themselves, governments will mandate parental controls on phones and laptops. The IWF will share tools, expertise, and technology on fighting CSAM with companies who sign up to the new voluntary standards. They require firms to take steps to tackle child abuse including: Compliance will be assessed by an independent auditor. Baroness Gabrielle Bertin, who was appointed by the UK government to lead a review of pornography backed the move. “These are pragmatic and necessary steps. There is potential to make a huge impact for children’s online safety here"", she said. But campaigners have told the BBC they want to see evidence of concrete action from Aylo. Elena Michael ,co-founder of Notyourporn, a group fighting the image-based sexual abuse of adults, sex workers and under-18's, broadly welcomed the plan but added: ""What I don't want to happen is this to be used as some sort of marketing tactic, or some sort of paper pushing exercise, or a way for companies to say, on the surface, 'look we're doing something', but actually, the substance of it is not there"". Pornhub and the business that owns it has previously faced numerous allegations, and legal action, over claims that it failed to do enough to tackle non-consensual content. In 2023 its parent company announced it had changed ownership. In the same year it rebranded from Mindgeek to Aylo. The IWF believes it has improved, and says annual ""actionable reports"" it has received of CSAM on Aylo owned sites have fallen to zero. It points to Aylo introducing new safeguards and ""expanding [its] moderation workforce and processes"". The company also uses some technologies provided by the IWF. Susie Hargreaves OBE, chief executive of the IWF, said the adult industry had billions of users worldwide and as such had a role to play ""in making sure the internet is a safe place"". Aylo's David Cooke said he was proud of the work with the IWF. ""We have made significant, ground-breaking advancements in Trust and Safety measures across our platforms, and we aren’t slowing down."" But others were unimpressed - Michael Bowe, a lawyer involved in action against the company on behalf of dozens of women relating to incidents prior to 2023, told the BBC that experience had made him sceptical of its claims about moderation processes: ""One more announcement doesn't mean much"", he said. ",BBC,16/05/2024,"[""Pornhub's parent company Aylo has announced it has backed new standards of good practice for pornography sites on combating child abuse, drawn up by UK charity the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF)."", ""The IWF is a key part of the UK's fight against online child sexual abuse material (CSAM), enabling people and organisations to report suspected online child abuse content."", 'It hopes the announcement will lead other porn websites to support the voluntary standards developed in partnership with Aylo over a period of 18 months.', 'But campaigners have told the BBC the standards will only be successful if they lead to real change.', 'The actions pornographic sites are expected to take include checks that users are over-18, but this could be simply asking users to declare that they are.', 'But the standards also say they must obey the law and the UK Online Safety Act will soon require much more robust age checks than ticking a box, such as AI face-scanning tech that estimates age.', 'Aylo has previously argued that forcing sites to check ages drives users to ""darker corners of the internet"" and has fought legal battles against US state laws requiring age verification.', 'But now it says it will follow legal requirements. ""', 'We will always comply with the law, and the Online Safety Act is no different, but it is clear from other jurisdictions that site-level age verification does not prevent children from accessing adult content online while creating data privacy issues and increasing exposure to unmoderated, harmful material"", it said.', 'And it says it hopes that instead of age checks on sites themselves, governments will mandate parental controls on phones and laptops.', 'The IWF will share tools, expertise, and technology on fighting CSAM with companies who sign up to the new voluntary standards.', 'They require firms to take steps to tackle child abuse including: Compliance will be assessed by an independent auditor.', 'Baroness Gabrielle Bertin, who was appointed by the UK government to lead a review of pornography backed the move. “', 'These are pragmatic and necessary steps.', 'There is potential to make a huge impact for children’s online safety here"", she said.', 'But campaigners have told the BBC they want to see evidence of concrete action from Aylo.', 'Elena Michael ,co-founder of Notyourporn, a group fighting the image-based sexual abuse of adults, sex workers and under-18\'s, broadly welcomed the plan but added: ""What I don\'t want to happen is this to be used as some sort of marketing tactic, or some sort of paper pushing exercise, or a way for companies to say, on the surface, \'look we\'re doing something\', but actually, the substance of it is not there"".', 'Pornhub and the business that owns it has previously faced numerous allegations, and legal action, over claims that it failed to do enough to tackle non-consensual content.', 'In 2023 its parent company announced it had changed ownership.', 'In the same year it rebranded from Mindgeek to Aylo.', 'The IWF believes it has improved, and says annual ""actionable reports"" it has received of CSAM on Aylo owned sites have fallen to zero.', 'It points to Aylo introducing new safeguards and ""expanding [its] moderation workforce and processes"".', 'The company also uses some technologies provided by the IWF.', 'Susie Hargreaves OBE, chief executive of the IWF, said the adult industry had billions of users worldwide and as such had a role to play ""in making sure the internet is a safe place"".', 'Aylo\'s David Cooke said he was proud of the work with the IWF. ""', 'We have made significant, ground-breaking advancements in Trust and Safety measures across our platforms, and we aren’t slowing down.""', 'But others were unimpressed - Michael Bowe, a lawyer involved in action against the company on behalf of dozens of women relating to incidents prior to 2023, told the BBC that experience had made him sceptical of its claims about moderation processes: ""One more announcement doesn\'t mean much"", he said.']",0.1200709259999626,"But the standards also say they must obey the law and the UK Online Safety Act will soon require much more robust age checks than ticking a box, such as AI face-scanning tech that estimates age.","The IWF is a key part of the UK's fight against online child sexual abuse material (CSAM), enabling people and organisations to report suspected online child abuse content.",0.6006722331047059,"Pornhub's parent company Aylo has announced it has backed new standards of good practice for pornography sites on combating child abuse, drawn up by UK charity the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF).","But others were unimpressed - Michael Bowe, a lawyer involved in action against the company on behalf of dozens of women relating to incidents prior to 2023, told the BBC that experience had made him sceptical of its claims about moderation processes: ""One more announcement doesn't mean much"", he said.",2024-05-19 US woman accused of stealing identities to give North Koreans jobs,https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-69024813,2024-05-17T00:34:01.000Z,"US prosecutors have accused an American woman of helping North Koreans find remote jobs in the US and then send their wages back to North Korea. Christina Chapman is charged alongside three North Korean nationals with participating in the elaborate plot. The Arizona resident allegedly stole the identities of American citizens, then helped foreign IT workers use those identities to pose as Americans and gain employment at US companies, according to prosecutors. Ms Chapman has been charged with nine counts of conspiracy to defraud the US. Investigators said the ""staggering"" scheme used the stolen identities of 60 people, and generated nearly $7m (£5.5m) in funds that were sent back to North Korea, possibly to contribute to the country's weapons programme. The scheme - involving some 300 US companies - allegedly started in October 2020. According to the indictment, the workers were ""highly skilled information technology (IT) workers."" The companies, which were unaware of the scheme, were not identified, but officials said they included several Fortune 500 companies, as well as a major TV network, indicta defence company, a ""premier"" Silicon Valley tech company and an ""iconic"" American auto manufacturer. Ms Chapman, 49, allegedly ran a ""laptop farm"" from her home, where she would log into laptops issued by the companies so that it appeared the North Korean workers from other countries were physically in the US. She would then help the IT workers remotely connect to the laptops, and also help them to receive their wages from the companies, according to the 57-page charging document. The indictment says ""in exchange, Chapman charged monthly fees to the overseas IT workers for her services, enriching herself off the scheme"". She also is accused of unsuccessfully trying to procure employment at US government agencies. ""The charges in this case should be a wakeup call for American companies and government agencies that employ remote IT workers,"" said Nicole Argentieri, head of the Justice Department's Criminal Division. ""These crimes benefitted the North Korean government, giving it a revenue stream and, in some instances, proprietary information stolen by the co-conspirators."" Officials said Ms Chapman was contacted in March 2020 by an unknown individual who asked her to ""be the US face"" of their company. Ms Chapman is charged alongside North Korean citizens Jiho Han, Chunji Jin, Haoran Xu who remain at large. All three have been tied to North Koreans Munitions Industry Department, according to the US State Department, which notes that the organisation handles ballistic missile and weapons production for North Korea. The US state department has offered $5m for ""information that leads to the disruption"" of North Korean money laundering and financial fraud crimes. Ms Chapman was arrested on Thursday in Arizona. It is unclear if she has hired a lawyer who could speak on her behalf. ",BBC,17/05/2024,"['US prosecutors have accused an American woman of helping North Koreans find remote jobs in the US and then send their wages back to North Korea.', 'Christina Chapman is charged alongside three North Korean nationals with participating in the elaborate plot.', 'The Arizona resident allegedly stole the identities of American citizens, then helped foreign IT workers use those identities to pose as Americans and gain employment at US companies, according to prosecutors.', 'Ms Chapman has been charged with nine counts of conspiracy to defraud the US.', 'Investigators said the ""staggering"" scheme used the stolen identities of 60 people, and generated nearly $7m (£5.5m) in funds that were sent back to North Korea, possibly to contribute to the country\'s weapons programme.', 'The scheme - involving some 300 US companies - allegedly started in October 2020.', 'According to the indictment, the workers were ""highly skilled information technology (IT) workers.""', 'The companies, which were unaware of the scheme, were not identified, but officials said they included several Fortune 500 companies, as well as a major TV network, indicta defence company, a ""premier"" Silicon Valley tech company and an ""iconic"" American auto manufacturer.', 'Ms Chapman, 49, allegedly ran a ""laptop farm"" from her home, where she would log into laptops issued by the companies so that it appeared the North Korean workers from other countries were physically in the US.', 'She would then help the IT workers remotely connect to the laptops, and also help them to receive their wages from the companies, according to the 57-page charging document.', 'The indictment says ""in exchange, Chapman charged monthly fees to the overseas IT workers for her services, enriching herself off the scheme"".', 'She also is accused of unsuccessfully trying to procure employment at US government agencies. ""', 'The charges in this case should be a wakeup call for American companies and government agencies that employ remote IT workers,"" said Nicole Argentieri, head of the Justice Department\'s Criminal Division. ""', 'These crimes benefitted the North Korean government, giving it a revenue stream and, in some instances, proprietary information stolen by the co-conspirators.""', 'Officials said Ms Chapman was contacted in March 2020 by an unknown individual who asked her to ""be the US face"" of their company.', 'Ms Chapman is charged alongside North Korean citizens Jiho Han, Chunji Jin, Haoran Xu who remain at large.', 'All three have been tied to North Koreans Munitions Industry Department, according to the US State Department, which notes that the organisation handles ballistic missile and weapons production for North Korea.', 'The US state department has offered $5m for ""information that leads to the disruption"" of North Korean money laundering and financial fraud crimes.', 'Ms Chapman was arrested on Thursday in Arizona.', 'It is unclear if she has hired a lawyer who could speak on her behalf.']",-0.1454819663219695,"She would then help the IT workers remotely connect to the laptops, and also help them to receive their wages from the companies, according to the 57-page charging document.","The US state department has offered $5m for ""information that leads to the disruption"" of North Korean money laundering and financial fraud crimes.",0.999517560005188,"These crimes benefitted the North Korean government, giving it a revenue stream and, in some instances, proprietary information stolen by the co-conspirators.""",,2024-05-19