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Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailChiefs and 49ers face pop quiz on economy, AI and the stock market ahead of Super Bowl 58CNBC's Contessa Brewer reports from Las Vegas ahead of Super Bowl 58, quizzing the San Francisco and Kansas City rosters on the economy, AI, Elon Musk and the stock market.
Persons: Contessa Brewer, Elon Musk Organizations: Chiefs, 49ers, Super, San Francisco and Kansas City Locations: Las Vegas, San Francisco and
Crafty WAG Inks N.F.L. Deal
  + stars: | 2024-02-02 | by ( Ruth La Ferla | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
You are who you know — a truism forcefully demonstrated this week when Kristin Juszczyk, who happens to be married to the San Francisco 49ers fullback, Kyle Juszczyk, signed a deal with the N.F.L. That agreement, previously reported by Sportico, came on the heels of Taylor Swift wearing one of Ms. Juszczyk’s puffer jackets to a Kansas City Chiefs game last month. On the jacket was 87, the number worn by her boyfriend, Kansas City tight end Travis Kelce. Brittany Mahomes, the wife of the Kansas City quarterback, Patrick Mahomes, has also worn a jacket by Ms. Juszczyk. With San Francisco and Kansas City facing off in Super Bowl LVIII on Feb. 11, Ms. Juszczyk, Ms. Mahomes and Ms.
Persons: Kristin Juszczyk, Kyle Juszczyk, Sportico, Taylor Swift, Juszczyk’s, Travis Kelce, Brittany Mahomes, Patrick Mahomes, Juszczyk, Mahomes, Swift Organizations: San Francisco 49ers, Kansas City Chiefs, Kansas City, Francisco and Kansas City Locations: Kansas City, Francisco and Kansas
The biggest question in world finance right now is whether the eye-watering rebound in borrowing rates we've seen over the past month is just another overshoot - or the new reality. G7 2-year yields soarFed, ECB and BoE 'terminal rates' riseWorld economy surprising in 2023LOSING THE PLOTSince the middle of last year, futures markets have consistently priced peak Fed rates below where Fed officials themselves were guiding. But for at least six of the past nine months, futures markets priced a lower terminal rate than the central Fed view. Five-year equivalents have risen sharply too, while long-term euro zone inflation swaps are pricing the highest rates in more than a decade. The outcome is "strongly bimodal", they said, and either a recession hits and rates are cut, or it doesn't and rates go to 6.5%.
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