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Search resuls for: "WSJ’s"


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How Adobe Became One of America’s Most Valuable Tech Companies Adobe is one of America's most profitable tech companies and an industry leader in the creative software space. WSJ’s Aaron Tilley explains the business strategies the Silicon Valley-based developer pursued to become so successful.
Finally! Savings Rates Could Soon Beat Inflation
  + stars: | 2023-02-23 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +6 min
Why savings rates could rise in 2023Fortunately, many experts predict the situation will reverse, with inflation on a downward trend even as the Fed continues nudging up interest rates. Since the most generous banks have increased their rates in tandem with the Fed, they would likely increase savings rates as well. Bottenfield doesn’t see savings account interest rates surpassing the rate of inflation before 2024. “The difference between an online savings account and the average brick and mortar account is huge right now,” says Tumin. If you think interest rates will fall, you can lock in mid-4% rates long-term with a five-year CD.
Why Amtrak Service Is Slow in Most of the U.S. Amtrak says increasing service in cities like Phoenix and Atlanta will lead to more riders and more revenue. But one thing stands in the way: freight rail. WSJ’s Ted Mann explains why it's Amtrak’s biggest obstacle to expansion and improvement. Illustration: Ryan Trefes
E33What Science Tells Us About the Surge in Strep and Flu This Season Getting the flu can increase the risk of getting a second infection, including strep throat. WSJ’S Daniela Hernandez explains the science behind that, plus what it means for the rest of the winter and how we can protect ourselves from the tripledemic. Illustration: David Fang
What the Renault-Nissan Shakeup Says About the Global Auto Industry Renault CEO Luca de Meo and Nissan CEO Makoto Uchida spoke to The Wall Street Journal about the reorganization of their alliance in a deal that gives both companies more autonomy. WSJ’s Nick Kostov explains the factors behind the decision and what it means for auto makers and investors. Photo Composite: Adele Morgan
E4Snap’s Stock Has Fallen Almost 80% This Year: What Went Wrong Snap shifted from overdrive to reverse this year as it prepares for its lowest period of sales growth since going public. WSJ’s Meghan Bobrowsky explains how Snap’s dependence on digital ads led to its restructuring efforts. Illustration: Jacob Reynolds
What the Renault-Nissan Shakeup Says About the Global Auto Industry Renault CEO Luca de Meo and Nissan CEO Makoto Uchida spoke to The Wall Street Journal about the reorganization of their alliance in a deal that gives both companies more autonomy. WSJ’s Nick Kostov explains the factors behind the decision and what it means for auto makers and investors. Photo Composite: Adele Morgan
What the Renault-Nissan Shakeup Says About the Global Auto Industry Renault CEO Luca de Meo and Nissan CEO Makoto Uchida spoke to The Wall Street Journal about the reorganization of their alliance in a deal that gives both companies more autonomy. WSJ’s Nick Kostov explains the factors behind the decision and what it means for auto makers and investors. Photo Composite: Adele Morgan
How Smartphone Cases Are Ready for New iPhones Even Before They Release Here’s what’s going on behind the scenesBy Wall Street Journal Feb 16, 2023 12:00 pm As soon as Apple releases new products, third-party cases and compatible accessories seem to instantly hit the shelves. How is this possible when cases can take months to design and mass produce? WSJ’s Dalvin Brown explains. Illustration: Elizabeth Smelov
Yet some business-technology professionals are uneasy about integrating it into the enterprise stack, citing concerns over its use of online data and security risks. But at the moment, ChatGPT “should be used with caution in an enterprise business setting,” she said. Newsletter Sign-up WSJ | CIO Journal The Morning Download delivers daily insights and news on business technology from the CIO Journal team. For now, Mr. Schmidt said, generative AI capabilities should be reserved for writing corporate boilerplate—product or service announcements, or other promotional materials. For enterprise information-technology, “ChatGPT use cases might be a smaller universe than people are imagining,” he said.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailArtificial intelligence is good at picking up patterns and eliminating trading biases, says WSJ’s Greg ZuckermanGreg Zuckerman, the Wall Street Journal special writer, joins ‘Power Lunch’ to discuss the role of AI in stock trading. He also explains the merits and drawbacks of depending on machine learning for trading.
How a Little-Known Committee Determines the Start of a Recession
  + stars: | 2023-02-13 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Why Housing Can Skew Inflation Numbers Housing is one of the most weighted categories when tracking inflation, but it's also one of the most complicated to measure. WSJ’s David Harrison explains how the shelter index is calculated, and why it can muddy the inflation outlook for the Fed. Illustration: Laura Kammermann
What the Renault-Nissan Shakeup Says About the Global Auto Industry The alliance was plagued by rivalry and suspicion, rising when Carlos Ghosn was ousted as the companies' leaderBy Wall Street Journal Feb 13, 2023 10:57 am Renault CEO Luca de Meo and Nissan CEO Makoto Uchida spoke to The Wall Street Journal about the reorganization of their alliance in a deal that gives both companies more autonomy. WSJ’s Nick Kostov explains the factors behind the decision and what it means for auto makers and investors. Photo Composite: Adele Morgan
E46For eVTOLs to Really Take Off, Airspace Needs an Overhaul. Here’s Why. If a new-wave of air-taxis were to all suddenly take to the skies, the systems and protocols used to safely manage our skies wouldn’t cope. WSJ’s George Downs speaks to the FAA and others to find out how airspace is being redesigned. Illustration: George Downs
E4Snap’s Stock Has Fallen Almost 80% This Year: What Went Wrong Snap shifted from overdrive to reverse this year as it prepares for its lowest period of sales growth since going public. WSJ’s Meghan Bobrowsky explains how Snap’s dependence on digital ads led to its restructuring efforts. Illustration: Jacob Reynolds
The Best Cash Gas Credit Card on the Market Right Now
  + stars: | 2023-02-10 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +6 min
That flexibility is why Buy Side from WSJ named the Wells Fargo Autograph Card our Best Overall Gas Card of 2023. The Wells Fargo Autograph Card comes with no annual fee, meaning you don’t need to worry if you’re earning enough rewards to justify keeping the card. As long as you pay off your balance in full each month, using the Wells Fargo Autograph card will put more money in your wallet. With the Autograph card, Wells Fargo doesn’t play these games. Consider the Wells Fargo Active Cash card, the WSJ Buy Side Pick for Best Cash Back Credit Card.
E46For eVTOLs to Really Take Off, Airspace Needs an Overhaul. Here’s Why. If a new-wave of air-taxis were to all suddenly take to the skies, the systems and protocols used to safely manage our skies wouldn’t cope. WSJ’s George Downs speaks to the FAA and others to find out how airspace is being redesigned. Illustration: George Downs
E4Snap’s Stock Has Fallen Almost 80% This Year: What Went Wrong Snap shifted from overdrive to reverse this year as it prepares for its lowest period of sales growth since going public. WSJ’s Meghan Bobrowsky explains how Snap’s dependence on digital ads led to its restructuring efforts. Illustration: Jacob Reynolds
Drone Footage Shows Scale of Destruction in One Turkish District
  + stars: | 2023-02-07 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Bing with AI: Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella on Why Search Is Changed ForeverMicrosoft is combining the tech behind OpenAI’s ChatGPT with its Bing search engine. In an interview, WSJ’s Joanna Stern spoke with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella about the new tools and how AI is going to change search. (Oh, and Clippy!) Photo illustration: Preston Jessee for The Wall Street Journal
S2 E17How to Use the iPhone 14’s Satellite SOS If You’re in an Emergency The iPhone 14’s satellite connection allows you to send messages to emergency services if you’re ever in trouble when there’s no cellular service. WSJ’s Joanna Stern (along with an accident-prone dummy clone) tests the feature and guides you through how to use it. Photo illustration: Preston Jessee for The Wall Street Journal
E4Snap’s Stock Has Fallen Almost 80% This Year: What Went Wrong Snap shifted from overdrive to reverse this year as it prepares for its lowest period of sales growth since going public. WSJ’s Meghan Bobrowsky explains how Snap’s dependence on digital ads led to its restructuring efforts. Illustration: Jacob Reynolds
The Computer Chip Wars: How AMD Ended Intel's Market Dominance Intel has ruled the market for central processing units since the 1980s. But rival AMD overtook Intel in market value last year, thanks in part to an expensive bet on chip design. WSJ’s Asa Fitch explains the companies’ battle for the brains of your computer.
Best Online Stock Trading Platforms of 2023
  + stars: | 2023-02-02 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +20 min
Luckily, the past few years has seen a profusion of online stock trading platforms. We spent hours comparing more than a dozen stock trading platforms looking for the most intuitive tools, in-depth research and access to guidance and other educational content. We considered all of this when making our picks for the Best Stock Trading Platforms of 2023. How we pickedTo pick Buy Side from WSJ’s best stock trading platforms, we reviewed offerings from more than a dozen companies. Morgan Stanley is the corporate parent of E*Trade, one of the stock trading platforms considered for this story.
E33What Science Tells Us About the Surge in Strep and Flu This Season Getting the flu can increase the risk of getting a second infection, including strep throat. WSJ’S Daniela Hernandez explains the science behind that, plus what it means for the rest of the winter and how we can protect ourselves from the tripledemic. Illustration: David Fang
By Martha C. WhiteThe Fed is set to send savings and CD rates higher yet again. On Wednesday, the Fed announced a quarter-percentage-point interest rate increase to its benchmark federal-funds rate, following its Jan. 31-Feb.1 meeting. Policy makers’ economic projections released in December show that Fed officials don’t expect inflation to hit 2.1% until 2025. “It’s going to be slow, but I think the trend is going to be higher” rates. If that’s your bank, he adds, you “absolutely should be taking advantage of a higher rate savings account.”
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