With AI cloud competition heating up, this company that used to own Russia’s biggest search engine is making its case.
We use Google Analytics to count anonymous page views and understand which content gets read. No ads, no profiles. Decline keeps you on cookieless mode. Details.
高シグナルの見出しのみ — マクロイベント、決算、M&A、規制。リスト記事とアナリストのクリックベイトはデフォルトでフィルタ。1時間ごとに更新。
With AI cloud competition heating up, this company that used to own Russia’s biggest search engine is making its case.
Starting next month, passengers catching morning flights out of Boston Logan International Airport will be able to go through a Transportation Security Administration screening outpost in Framingham, Mass., rather than a terminal. Shuttle buses will then whisk them roughly 25 miles to the airport, where they will be dropped off beyond the security checkpoint, avoiding crowded parking lots, chaotic curbsides and flight check-in queues. Passengers will be able to check in and drop their bags at the remote terminal in Framingham, housed in a newly constructed temporary building.
With AI cloud competition heating up, this company that used to own Russia’s biggest search engine is making its case.
Chinese electric vehicle maker Xpeng said on Monday it had begun mass production of its first robotaxi at its Guangzhou headquarters, targeting fully driverless operations by early 2027. The Tesla rival is accelerating its shift toward driverless vehicles and humanoid robotics as competition intensifies in the world’s largest auto market. The new robotaxi, built on Xpeng's GX platform, is China’s first "production-ready, pre-assembled robotaxi model developed entirely with in-house technologies," the company said.
The Chinese search-engine operator recorded another sharp profit drop and a fourth straight quarter of revenue declines.
The period spans from when tariffs were imposed under the IEEPA to the US Supreme Court’s ruling that the law did not give President Trump authority to impose them.
In a nondescript building on Kirtland Air Force Base on the high desert of New Mexico, liquid-cooled supercomputers gurgle and hum their way through some of the most complex math problems the U.S. government seeks to solve: simulating how hypersonic nuclear weapons would move through the earth's atmosphere, or what would happen if one nuclear warhead detonated near another. For more than a decade, the chips handling this secretive and demanding work came from mainstream semiconductor firms like Nvidia or Advanced Micro Devices. But with those companies increasingly designing their chips for artificial intelligence and facing supply shortages, the managers in charge of the systems at Sandia National Laboratories, which operates the machines at Kirtland and is one of three U.S. labs tasked with developing and maintaining the nation's nuclear weapons arsenal, are increasingly unsure how they will find computing power for high-precision scientific work like theirs.
Buying Nvidia stock just before quarterly results has historically produced modest short-term gains, but the longer-term picture has been much stronger.
This is nightmare fuel for a historically expensive stock market that had already priced in additional rate cuts.
U.S. President Donald Trump said he "should have asked for more" of a stake in Intel on behalf of the U.S. government, in an interview with Fortune magazine published on Monday. (Reporting by Ananya Palyekar in Bengaluru; Editing by Alex Richardson)
(Bloomberg) -- Central banks are expected to step up gold-buying, helping prices to recover by year-end, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.Most Read from BloombergWinners and Losers From Trump and Xi’s Beijing Summit TalksHormuz Oil Flows Creep Higher as More Supertankers ExitUS, Iran Stall on Hormuz Reopening as Oil Supplies TightenUS and Iran Far From Deal as Bond Rout Piles Pressure on TrumpTrump Gets Revenge on Republican Who Voted to Convict HimPurchases are expected to pick up to averag
(Bloomberg) -- Elon Musk said he’s back in Texas working on plans for an initial public offering of SpaceX as the rocket and artificial intelligence company gears up for the largest listing of all time. Most Read from BloombergWinners and Losers From Trump and Xi’s Beijing Summit TalksHormuz Oil Flows Creep Higher as More Supertankers ExitUS, Iran Stall on Hormuz Reopening as Oil Supplies TightenUS and Iran Far From Deal as Bond Rout Piles Pressure on TrumpTrump Gets Revenge on Republican Who Vo
Unprecedented fireworks at the Fed could be coming soon.
Commonwealth Bank of Australia on Monday appointed Mary-Anne Williams as its chief AI scientist in what the bank said would be the first such role at an Australian lender. Williams would join from the University of New South Wales, where she serves as the deputy director of the varsity's AI Institute, among other roles. CBA did not say when Williams would join.
The S&P 500 tumbled 1.2% on Friday, the Nasdaq Composite fell 1.5% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 537 points, or 1.1%. The 30-year government bond hit its highest closing yield in nearly 20 years, at 5.127%. President Trump said that he and Chinese leader Xi Jinping “feel very similar on Iran” and both want the conflict to end.
Nvidia, the most valuable public company by market capitalization, will report earnings this week, the last of the Magnificent Seven tech companies to do so. Big retailers including Walmart and Home Depot will also report.
(Bloomberg) -- Gold held a decline as a lack of progress in reopening the Strait of Hormuz continued to fan inflation concerns that have sent bond markets tumbling. Most Read from BloombergWinners and Losers From Trump and Xi’s Beijing Summit TalksHormuz Oil Flows Creep Higher as More Supertankers ExitUS, Iran Stall on Hormuz Reopening as Oil Supplies TightenTrump Gets Revenge on Republican Who Voted to Convict HimUS and Iran Far From Deal as Bond Rout Piles Pressure on TrumpBullion was steady a
NEW DELHI, May 18 (Reuters) - An Indian court has told Apple to "fully cooperate" with investigators in an antitrust case related to the iPhone apps market, not agreeing with the U.S. company's
(Bloomberg) -- Oil rose for a third day as President Donald Trump again pressured Iran to come to a deal to end weeks of war and reopen the crucial Strait of Hormuz. Most Read from BloombergWinners and Losers From Trump and Xi’s Beijing Summit TalksHormuz Oil Flows Creep Higher as More Supertankers ExitUS, Iran Stall on Hormuz Reopening as Oil Supplies TightenTrump Gets Revenge on Republican Who Voted to Convict HimUS and Iran Far From Deal as Bond Rout Piles Pressure on TrumpBrent advanced abov
(Bloomberg) -- China’s growth slowed across the board in April with investment resuming declines, calling into question the government’s reluctance to add stimulus to the economy as a global energy crisis hits factories and consumers across the world.Most Read from BloombergWinners and Losers From Trump and Xi’s Beijing Summit TalksHormuz Oil Flows Creep Higher as More Supertankers ExitUS, Iran Stall on Hormuz Reopening as Oil Supplies TightenUS and Iran Far From Deal as Bond Rout Piles Pressure
Carlisle trades at $329.74 per share and has stayed right on track with the overall market, gaining 7.6% over the last six months. At the same time, the S&P 500 has returned 9.9%.
(Bloomberg) -- Major Wall Street firms are doubling their price targets on Kioxia Holdings Corp. after the Japanese memory-chip maker gave a stronger-than-expected outlook.Most Read from BloombergWinners and Losers From Trump and Xi’s Beijing Summit TalksHormuz Oil Flows Creep Higher as More Supertankers ExitUS, Iran Stall on Hormuz Reopening as Oil Supplies TightenUS and Iran Far From Deal as Bond Rout Piles Pressure on TrumpTrump Gets Revenge on Republican Who Voted to Convict HimCitigroup Glo
The US did approve 10 Chinese firms as buyers for the H200, Nvidia’s second-most powerful AI chip, though no purchases have yet been made.
(Bloomberg) -- Oil rose for a third day as President Donald Trump again pressured Iran to come to a deal to end weeks of war and reopen the crucial Strait of Hormuz. Most Read from BloombergWinners and Losers From Trump and Xi's Beijing Summit TalksHormuz Oil Flows Creep Higher as More Supertankers ExitUS, Iran Stall on Hormuz Reopening as Oil Supplies TightenTrump Gets Revenge on Republican Who Voted to Convict HimHow Keir Starmer Imploded and Plunged Britain Into More ChaosBrent advanced above
By Praveen Paramasivam May 18 (Reuters) - Gourmet Investments Hospitality Group, which runs PizzaExpress and Chili's in India, plans to double its restaurant count over the next three years and to
Stanley Druckenmiller is one of the most-watched money managers on Wall Street, and his Duquesne Family Office Q1 2026 13F filing just landed. The headline number is brutal for Alphabet bulls. Duquesne sold all 385,000 shares of Alphabet (GOOGL) Class A stock during the quarter. That same stake had ...
Overseas buyers are looking to America for oil and transportation fuels, helping deplete its domestic inventories.
Both sides were under pressure to reach a deal after South Korea’s government warned that it could invoke emergency-mediation powers to force a settlement if negotiations fail.
(Bloomberg) -- Oil rose for a third day as President Donald Trump again pressured Iran to come to a deal to end weeks of war and reopen the crucial Strait of Hormuz. Most Read from BloombergWinners and Losers From Trump and Xi’s Beijing Summit TalksHormuz Oil Flows Creep Higher as More Supertankers ExitUS, Iran Stall on Hormuz Reopening as Oil Supplies TightenTrump Gets Revenge on Republican Who Voted to Convict HimHow Keir Starmer Imploded and Plunged Britain Into More ChaosBrent advanced towar
Hub Group has followed the market’s trajectory closely, rising in tandem with the S&P 500 over the past six months. The stock has climbed by 6.8% to $37.96 per share while the index has gained 9.9%.