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Nvidia stock climbed 4% on Tuesday, extending its rally to 14% in five days. The chipmaker's market value soared by $400 billion — more than Costco is worth. Its $400 billion increase in value within a week is worth underscoring. Costco, which generated $254 billion of revenue and $7.4 billion of net income last year, is worth less than that. There's been no greater beneficiary than founder and CEO Jensen Huang, whose net worth has ballooned from about $14 billion to $106 billion in under two years.
Persons: Jensen Huang, Blackwell, , There's, Amancio Ortega, Michael Dell, Huang, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, OpenAI's Sam Altman, Oracle's Larry Ellison, Microsoft's Satya Nadella, Andy Jassy, Alphabet's Sundar Pichai Organizations: Costco, Nvidia, Service, Microsoft, Apple, Bloomberg, Big Tech
In past years, media companies chased high subscriber numbers in an attempt to best each other. Nathaniel S. Butler | National Basketball Association | Getty ImagesWith the NBA's media rights negotiations still ongoing, sports will remain a topic of conversation at this year's gathering. League commissioners, especially the NFL's Roger Goodell, are often attendees of the Sun Valley conference. Discovery has been weighing whether to match a competing offer for the media rights as the league looks to finalize smaller package deals. Sports remain the glue holding the traditional pay-TV bundle together, and has proven invaluable for streaming services, too.
Persons: Drew Angerer, Discovery's David Zaslav, Bob Iger, Dana Walden, Alan Bergman, Josh D'Amaro, Hugh Johnston, Ted Sarandos, Greg Peters, Andy Jassy, Jeff Bezos, Tim Cook, it's, Shari Redstone, Neil Begley, Redstone, David A, Barry Diller —, Paramount —, Jeff Shell, Max, Jonathan Miller, Begley, Sun, Mark Boidman, Dwyane Wade, Nathaniel S, Butler, Roger Goodell, Miller, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Andrew Harnik Organizations: Getty Images Media, titans, Allen, Co, Warner Bros, Netflix, Apple, Amusements, Paramount Global, Paramount, Moody's Investors Services, Co . Media, Technology Conference, Grogan, CNBC, Media, Shell, Disney, Hulu, ESPN, Fox Corp, Integrated Media, Hollywood, Solomon Partners, Sports, NBA, National Basketball Association, Getty, League, Sun, NFL, YouTube, Amazon Locations: Sun Valley , Idaho, Sun, Idaho, Atlanta
The "Magnificent Seven" companies include Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla. Here's who earns the most, how much they all made last year, and how it breaks down. Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementThe "Magnificent Seven" companies — Microsoft, Apple, Nvidia, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Tesla — have a combined value of nearly $14 trillion.
Persons: Tesla, trillions, Here's, , Tim Cook's, Andy Jassy Organizations: Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, Service, Big Tech, Business
The fight over return-to-office is getting dirty
  + stars: | 2023-11-07 | by ( Ed Zitron | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +13 min
Evidence is as evidence doesAs the return-to-office battle has heated up in the past six months, there has been a marked increase in declarations that remote work is less productive. The researchers determined that remote workers were 18% less productive than their in-person counterparts. Just the vibesDespite the limited evidence against it, corporations are increasingly trying to kill remote work. That's what makes the move to kill off remote work so frustrating. It's not clear that the return-to-office move is about making workers more productive or building a better culture.
Persons: it's, Mike Hopkins, they're, India —, Nicholas Bloom, who's, David Baszucki's, Geico, Amazon's Andy Jassy, Geico's Todd Combs, there's, Safra, Larry Ellison, wrongheaded, galvanizing sycophants, Ed Zitron Organizations: Amazon, Amazon Studios, National Bureau of Economic Research, Journalists, Stanford, Meta, , Writers Guild of America, SAG, United Auto Workers Locations: India
Google is factoring employees' in-office attendance into their performance reviews. A whopping 90% of companies plan to implement return-to-office policies by the end of 2024, according to an Aug. report from Resume Builder, which surveyed 1,000 company leaders. Nearly 30% say their company will threaten to fire employees who don't comply with in-office requirements. Even though more companies have introduced stricter in-office requirements for employees, office occupancy has remained relatively unchanged from the past year. In the U.S., employee productivity rose by 4.4% in 2020 and 2.2% in 2021, before falling in 2022, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Dan Kaplan, Kaplan, Amazon's Andy Jassy, Brian Elliott Organizations: Google, Kastle Systems, Companies, Korn, Bureau of Labor Statistics Locations: U.S
The idea of permanent remote work is slipping away. After almost three years of relaxed work-from-home policies, CEOs are starting to drag their remote employees back to the office most days of the week. The remote work genie is out of the bottleInfluential remote work researchers, including Stanford researcher Nicholas Bloom, have been backing a flexible, hybrid approach as the way forward. Bloom previously told Insider that well-organized hybrid work is a "win-win" for companies and workers. AdvertisementAdvertisementEveryone else Insider spoke to agreed, though some said even hybrid was likely less productive than being fully in the office.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Michael Gibbs, They've, Mark Zuckerberg, Andy Jassy, Gibbs, David Atkin, Raj Choudhury, Atkin, Ipsos, " Choudhury, Nicholas Bloom, Bloom, Choudhury, We'll, WFH, Jose Maria Barrero Organizations: Meta, Service, Companies, University of Chicago, Harvard Business School, National Bureau of Economic Research, MIT, Employees, The Washington Post, Stanford, WFH Locations: Wall, Silicon, Indian, Chennai
And more than 18,000 tech workers have been laid off in the first half of January from major players like Amazon and Salesforce. More big layoffs are probably on the way, says Roger Lee, the creator of Layoffs.fyi and a San Francisco-based HR tech founder. Despite the recent deluge of layoffs, Lee says there's some hope the current wave of cuts could slow. "There's obvious correlation between the Fed raising interest rates and these tech companies doing layoffs," Lee says. It's important to remember that the overall job market is pretty strong, and tech workers losing their jobs are getting hired again quickly.
America's unionization wave doesn't show signs of dissipating, and CEOs would be better suited adjusting their leadership style to meet it, especially as the war for talent continues. "Taking it very personally, and making it very personal, has been a huge mistake that employers have made," Bronfenbrenner told Insider. It's a measure that workers want things that employers can't give them and only a union can give them." "When more workers have unions, wages rise for union and non-union workers," Janelle Jones, the chief economist at the Department of Labor, wrote on the department's website. "But there are other measures — if you have a union, you'll have lower turnover, workers will be more productive.
And while I've got you here, it's time to start thinking about gifts with the holidays season in full swing. Do you know what's an informative, funny gift that has a long shelf life and, most important of all, is free? FTX Cryptocurrency exchange CEO Sam Bankman-Fried at a hearing on Capitol Hill on May 12, 2022. But the main attraction at The New York Times DealBook Summit on Wednesday was Sam Bankman-Fried. And frankly conflict of interest risk," SBF said.
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