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AdvertisementThe CHIPS and Science Act, offering over $30 billion in incentives, spurred semiconductor lobbying. Related VideoAmerican manufacturers like Intel and Micron boosted their lobbying funding, while foreign companies like TSMC assembled their DC-based government relations teams in response. Business Insider reviewed lobbying public disclosure reports associated with various chip companies and focused on the top listed lobbyists and governmental affairs departments. Only three companies—Polar Semiconductor, Global Foundries, and TSMC—have finalized funding contracts out of 21 set to receive CHIPS Act grant funding. The spokesperson declined to comment on chip lobbying efforts and the specifics of individual CHIPS applicants.
Persons: TSMC, Chris Miller, Joe Biden's, Donald Trump, Joe Rogan, TSMC —, Lori Yue, Yue, Trump, Howard Lutnick, Cantor Fitzgerald Organizations: Nvidia, TSMC, Intel, Big Tech, Micron, AMD, Business, Polar Semiconductor, Global, of Commerce, Companies, Columbia Business School, The Locations: Washington, Washington ,, Taiwan
CNN —The McRib is returning to menus this holiday season – but don’t get used to it. Essentially, consumers don’t know when it will show up next — and that element of surprise also drives demand. “It creates this sense of urgency that you have to get it now because you don’t know when it’s coming back. You don’t know if it’s coming back,” Henkes said. It’s so popular that the McDonald’s website listed “Why isn’t the McRib sold year-round?” as a frequently asked question.
Persons: McDonald’s, Nacho Fries, hasn’t, , Michael Della Penna, Stephen Zagor, David Henkes, Technomic, it’s, ” Henkes, Henkes, Brian Niccol, Zagor Organizations: CNN, Columbia Business School, Starbucks, Facebook, Locations: Kansas City
(Photo by Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto via Getty Images) Nicolas Economou | Nurphoto | Getty Images'That is a huge, huge gap'There is a growing disillusionment taking hold. Men are steadily dropping out of the workforce, especially those between the ages 25 to 54, which are considered their prime working years. A study by the Pew Research Center found that men who are not college-educated leave the workforce at higher rates than men who are. In 1995, both young men and women equally were likely to hold a bachelor's degree, at 25%. "That is a huge, huge gap," Pollak said.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Nicolas Economou, Pollak, " Pollak, Brett House, , Richard Fry, Fry, NEFE, Billy Hensley, Hensley, Ali Bustamante Organizations: Republican, Democratic, Getty, Nurphoto, Pew Research Center, Pew, Columbia Business School, CNBC, NEFE, Trump, Financial Wellness, Young, Roosevelt Institute Locations: Washington ,, U.S
AdvertisementTwo of the reported candidates for Treasury Secretary made their fortunes on Wall Street, including billionaire Apollo CEO Marc Rowan. Eligible federal appointees can defer capital gains taxes indefinitely when they sell stock or other assets in order to avoid a conflict of interest. As a top earner in New York, they would normally have to pay more than $3 million in capital gains taxes. The sum that would have been spent on capital gains taxes is now free to compound and grow. The IRS allows investors to defer capital gains taxes in other scenarios that are deemed outside their control.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Trump, Howard Lutnick, Cantor Fitzgerald, Major Trump, Chris Wright, Marc Rowan, Bush, Goldman Sachs, Henry Paulson, George H.W, Bob Willens, You've, Scott Bessent, frontrunners, eyeing Rowan, Kevin Warsh, Morgan Stanley, Warsh, Jane Lauder, Rowan, Ed Renn of Withersworldwide, Penny Pritzker, Mark Parthemer, Willens, Renn Organizations: Commerce, of Energy, Treasury, Executives, Columbia Business School, Federal Reserve, Government, IRS Locations: George H.W . Bush, New York
And to run the new cost-cutting department, Trump tapped the businessman he calls the world's "greatest cutter" — Elon Musk. If you're looking to take a chainsaw to the federal government, Musk seems perfectly suited to the job. When it comes to federal spending, one person's waste is another person's bread and butter. And his massive investments in electric vehicles and social media are dependent on all sorts of federal spending and oversight. Musk has acknowledged that Americans will feel "hardship" as a result of the cuts he wants to see implemented.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Elon Musk, Musk, cochair, Vivek Ramaswamy, Ronald Reagan —, There's, Michael Morris, Morris, it's, Andy Wu, Linda Bilmes, Ronald Reagan, Joel Friedman, Brian Hughes, DOGE, Reagan, Ramaswamy, It's, Sam, Uncle, Elon Organizations: Department of Government, Twitter, Tesla, SpaceX, Defense Department, IRS, Columbia Business School, Harvard Business School, Government, Harvard Kennedy School, Office, GAO, Fox News, Budget, Federal Aviation Administration, Veterans Administration, Locations: Ecuador, Independence
Why the C-suite is getting so big
  + stars: | 2024-11-15 | by ( Tim Paradis | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +8 min
Beyond the usual top jobs, some organizations now have chief experience officers, chief AI-ethics officers, and chief transformation officers. LinkedIn said in September that those were the fastest-growing C-suite roles on its platform from 2022 to 2023. Janet SherlockBut she said a lineup that includes a chief marketing officer, a chief information officer, and a chief customer-experience officer might indicate insufficient internal coordination. "Do I need a customer-experience officer whenever I have a chief commercial officer, a chief information officer, and a chief marketing officer?" Wiggins said that's why there's more pressure on C-suite leaders to act as a well-informed unit of experts rather than technical specialists.
Persons: Ram Charan, who's, Jason Saltzman, Charan, , they're, Jensen Huang, Janet Sherlock, Ralph Lauren, Sherlock, Christine Porath, Porath, Dorie Clark, Clark, Ty Wiggins, Russell Reynolds, Wiggins, remits Organizations: Bank of America, Verizon, Technologies, Nvidia, Elon, Tesla, University of North, Chapel, Columbia Business School, Workers, Russell Reynolds Associates Locations: Huang's, University of North Carolina
The Calm app bought some prime advertising space on election night. It bought ad blocks on CNN, ABC, and Comedy Central to give viewers "30 seconds of silence." "I give this campaign an A+," said Pauline Brown, a marketing professor at Columbia Business School. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . The advertisement involved a video with the message: "We bought this ad space to give you 30 seconds of silence.
Persons: Pauline Brown, , Donald Trump, UVCEWlOqpB — Dean Phillips, Americus Reed, Reed, Joe Biden Organizations: CNN, ABC, Comedy Central, Columbia Business School, Service, The Wharton School, Trump
While the Federal Reserve is still concerned about inflation, "we're seeing these signs of weakness in the labor market," Scanlon said. "This suggests that the labor market remains firm despite signs of weakening," J.P. Morgan noted. 'What the bond market is telling us'The stock market rallied after the presidential election results. That's what the bond market is telling us." Depending on what policies are enacted under Trump's second term, the inflation problem might get worse, experts say.
Persons: Brett House, Scanlon, There's, Mark Hamrick, J.P, Morgan, Hamrick, Trump Organizations: Columbia Business School, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, of Labor Statistics, BLS, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Treasury, Trump Locations: U.S, China
Anxiety over the US election could be hurting some workers' productivity. One boss is considering letting his employees work remotely in the weeks after the election. She said some workers will be busy hitting refresh on news and social sites, looking for insight into how the election might swing. Yet that doesn't mean being overly indulgent or letting workers focus too long on issues that aren't germane to the business. Despite the widespread election worries, not every indicator signals that the vexing political climate is throwing off most workers.
Persons: , AJ Gareffa, they've, Gareffa, Macey, Felix Kim, he's, Kim, Gabriella Kellerman, Kellerman, Dorie Clark, That's, Clark, Christine Porath, Chapel Hill's, Porath, Discourtesy, it's, Gartner, hadn't, doesn't, It's Organizations: Service, Business, American Psychological Association, APA, Columbia Business School, University of North, Chapel, Flagler Business School, Human Resource Management Locations: Livonia , Michigan, Detroit, ResumeBuilder.com, New York City, University of North Carolina, Michigan
Adidas is getting back on track after Yeezy woes
  + stars: | 2024-10-30 | by ( Maria Noyen | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +4 min
Adidas posted strong third-quarter growth. Operating profit jumped to 598 million euros ($646 million) from 409 million euros ($442 million) the year before. AdvertisementBjørn Gulden, who took over as Adidas CEO in 2023, said the Q3 numbers were evidence that Adidas is "moving in the right direction." Adidas stock dipped slightly on Wednesday but is up 20% since the start of the year, valuing the company at almost 40 billion euros ($43 billion). Related storiesOne of the reasons Adidas is finding success in the increasingly competitive athleisure and footwear industry is through the revival of retro styles such as the Adidas Samba, which was coronated the "It Shoe" of 2023.
Persons: Bjørn Gulden, , Ye, Bjørn, Alexander Hassenstein, Neil Saunders, Gulden, Matthew Quint, Quint Organizations: Adidas, Service, Kanye, Puma, Center, Global Brand Leadership, Columbia Business School, Nike Locations: China
New York CNN —Over the past three years, Elon Musk has met dozens of times with presidents, prime ministers, lawmakers, government officials and political candidates from around the world. Other meetings, such as a recent conversation with Argentine President Javier Milei, the world only glimpses through the billionaire’s social media posts. Recently, Musk’s political activism has begun to have a tangible impact on his companies: Brands pulled their advertisements from X, tanking its value. CNN’s analysis also suggests that Musk has, in particular, worked to develop influence among a set of right-leaning world leaders, including Modi, Bolsonaro, Milei and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. Now, as he campaigns for Trump, Musk may be setting himself up for his most prominent political role yet: a position in a possible future Trump White House.
Persons: Elon Musk, Benjamin Netanyahu, Javier Milei, Musk, Vladimir Putin, Dmitry Peskov, , Ron DeSantis, Robert F, Kennedy, Jr, Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, “ He’s, he’s, James Lewis, it’s, Tesla, , ” Lewis, “ They’re, Jair, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, Li Qiang, Emmanuel Macron, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Narendra Modi, William Klepper, you’ve, ” Musk, Modi, Giorgia Meloni, India’s Modi Organizations: New, New York CNN, Argentine, CNN, Wall Street Journal, Putin, Gov, Trump, Center for Strategic, International Studies, Indian, Columbia Business School, Brands, SpaceX, Italian, Elon, Trump White House, Department of Government Locations: New York, Israel, South Africa, United States, Brazil, Nuevo Leon, Shanghai, China, Turkish, California, Italy, India, Argentina,
Want to Understand America? Watch ‘Shark Tank.’
  + stars: | 2024-10-17 | by ( Jordyn Holman | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +19 min
“Shark Tank” Over the Years Season 1 (2009-10) The show premiered against the backdrop of the Great Recession. “‘Shark Tank’ is not a game show,” said Kevin O’Leary, a cutthroat investor known sarcastically in the tank as Mr. “Shark Tank” debuted less than a year after the subprime mortgage crisis devastated the global economy. But those kinds of companies are rarely reflected on “Shark Tank” for one simple reason: They don’t make for good TV. “The buyer gave us a shot at Target because of the ‘Shark Tank’ appearance.”“We turn you into a rock star and you become part of the ‘Shark Tank’ culture and the lore of ‘Shark Tank’,” said Mr. O’Leary.
Persons: Tod Wilson, Mark Cuban, Shark Lori Greiner, , Kevin O’Leary, Barbara Corcoran, Corcoran, Mark Burnett, Lehman Brothers, , Daymond John, John, ” Mr, Wilson, Ms, Angela Lee, Halle Tecco, Jamie Siminoff, Siminoff, O’Leary, Siminoff “, Mr, Robert Herjavec, Burnett, Herjavec, TJ Maxx, Lori Greiner, Greiner, Michael Jones, Taryn Jones Laeben, ” Tod Wilson, Lee, Sarah Paiji Yoo, Dave Heath, Ann Crady Weiss, Hatch, Weiss Organizations: ABC, Sharks, QVC, Amazon, Bombas, Corcoran Group, “ Tigers, , Twitter, Marketplace, Valley . Producers, Las, Columbia Business School, Halle, Four, Smart Tire Company, TJ, Tank, Tank Venture, Science Inc, Forbes, IRL Ventures, Educators, Blueland Locations: Angeles, Valley, Manhattan, America, Britain, Canada, United States, Houston, Somerset, N.J, Las Vegas, cybersecurity, Target, U.S, Los Angeles, Wegman’s, Minneapolis, Queens
Skims CEO Jens Grede compared the Kim Kardashian-fronted brand's successes to Nike in the 1990s. Grede told the FT that, like Nike, Skims "exists at the intersection of culture and commerce." According to Jens Grede, the CEO of Kim Kardashian's shapewear brand, Skims' hero is Nike — though, to be clear, not the Nike of today. AdvertisementKim Kardashian (L), Jens Grede (C), and Emma Grede (R) pose with the Amazon Innovation Award during the 2022 CFDA Fashion Awards. Kim Kardashian describes herself as the face of the Skims brand.
Persons: Jens Grede, Kim Kardashian, Grede, , Kim Kardashian's, Skims, Emma Grede, Kardashian, Jens, Jenner, Khloé Kardashian's, Kylie Jenner's, Dimitrios Kambouris, Isabelle Aleksander, Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods, Roger Federer, Aleksander, Matthew Quint, Kim, Quint, Jamie McCarthy, Spike Lee, Andre Agassi, Pete Sampras Organizations: Nike, Brand, Service, Financial Times, Skims, Amazon, JDO, Team USA, NBA, WNBA, USA, Center, Global Brand Leadership, Columbia Business School, Star, Kim Locations: Nike —, Skims
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFormer Goldman Sachs partner Abby Joseph Cohen on the markets, state of economy and 2024 electionAbby Joseph Cohen, Columbia Business School professor of business and former Goldman Sachs partner and chief U.S. strategist, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the latest market trends, state of the economy, impact of the 2024 election, and more.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Abby Joseph Cohen Organizations: Columbia Business School
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWatch CNBC's full interview with former Goldman Sachs partner Abby Joseph CohenAbby Joseph Cohen, Columbia Business School professor of business and former Goldman Sachs partner and chief U.S. strategist, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the latest market trends, state of the economy, impact of the 2024 election, and more.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Abby Joseph Cohen Abby Joseph Cohen Organizations: Columbia Business School
Ayesha Ofori worked in wealth management for Goldman Sachs for six years. AdvertisementThis as-told-to essay is based on a transcribed conversation with 40-year-old Ayesha Ofori, CEO of Propelle, from London, about her experience working at Goldman Sachs. If you'd asked me what success looked like at the time, it would've been being a partner at Goldman Sachs. AdvertisementSaving money isn't enoughWhen I was at Goldman Sachs, I noticed we didn't have many women clients. When I worked at Goldman Sachs, I was focused on paying off my student loans and saving money.
Persons: Ayesha Ofori, Goldman Sachs, Ofori, , Goldman, I'd, you'd, would've, I'm, It's, I've, you'll Organizations: Service, Goldman Sachs, Business, Columbia Business School, Goldman, Invest Locations: London, New York
watch nowYoung adults face financial obstaclesOver decades, attitudes about marriage and parenthood have changed. More recently, experts say, the overall cost of living has become a contributing factor in decisions to forgo parenthood. Between 1991 and 2024, the costs for child care rose at nearly twice the pace of overall inflation. But parenthood and related child care costs are not just personal financial issues, he added. "The cost of child care is really an economic growth and productivity issue as well," House said — and that affects all Americans, not just those with young kids.
Persons: Greg McBride, Gen Zers, Pew, Brett House, , Brett Organizations: Pew Research Center, KPMG, Columbia Business School, Columbia Business Locations: U.S, millennials
Fava beans, also called broad beans, contain levodopa or l-dopa, a chemical that can be converted into the pleasure hormone dopamine. One in five Americans experienced a mental health condition in 2020, according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration, and mental health costs the US economy more than $280 billion annually, according to researchers at Columbia Business School and Yale. "For me it's a matter of getting the awareness out that there is something that could improve mental health," she said. AdvertisementHere are her three favorite ways to prepare fava beans. Fava bean stir fryEvery week Mohd-Radzman makes a stir-fry with lots of fava beans.
Persons: , Nadia Mohd, Radzman, Ian Laker, pita, she's, snacking Organizations: Service, University of Cambridge, Business, Neuroscience, Molecular Psychiatry, Mental Health Administration, Columbia Business School, Yale Locations: Mohd
Joe Raedle | Getty ImagesThe president has no direct control over interest ratesAs it stands, the president exerts no direct control over interest rates. The Federal Reserve sets interest rates, and it operates independently of the White House. Last month, Trump said that if elected he would "bring interest rates way down." Now, however, Trump has cautioned against the Fed lowering rates shortly before the presidential election in November. "I think he's going to do something to probably help the Democrats, I think, if he lowers interest rates."
Persons: Donald Trump, Joe Raedle, Brett House, Trump, Fed Trump, Jerome Powell, Trump's, reappoint Powell, Powell, Greg McBride, Wells Fargo Organizations: Federal Reserve, White, Fed, Columbia Business School, Reserve Act, Republican, National Association of Black Journalists, Markets, U.S, Bloomberg Businessweek, Fox Business, Barclays Locations: Lago, Palm Beach , Florida, Chicago
Social media keeps catching Wall Street off guard
  + stars: | 2024-08-11 | by ( Laila Maidan | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +11 min
In 2015, he created TickerTags, a social media data aggregator that tracks company mentions, and sold it to Jefferies' M Science. To be fair…Speculating and making decisions based on social media trends is a risky wager. Wall Street doesn't always respond to social media trends that could negatively drive fundamentals because there aren't tools to understand the impacts, McKeown noted. In the event a social media trend is mentioned, it's not factored into their valuation model, Ober added. How social media sentiment plays into a thesis should depend on an investor's time horizon.
Persons: It's, Bud Light's, influencer Dylan Mulvaney, BUD, Kirk McKeown, Chris Camillo, Jefferies, Camillo, Bud, didn't, Paul Johnson, Laxman Narasimhan, misperception, Sara Senatore, I've, Senatore, Chipotle, Keith Lee, dollies, Brian Niccol, Goldman Sachs, They're, Matt Ober, they're, I'd, McKeown, it's, Ober Organizations: Service, Business, Anheuser, Busch, Wall Street, Pew Research Center, Molson, TAP, Starbucks, Nicusa Investment, Columbia Business School, of America Locations: Palestine, Gaza, SBUX
The Federal Reserve is gearing up to cut interest rates as soon as next month, which could bring relief to people with mortgages, credit cards and car loans. Certificates of deposit — fixed-rate bank accounts with term limits — are a go-to when interest rates are high. With interest rates coming down, the idea is just pay and save as much as you can right now. There’s no bad time to do that, but when the central bank lowers interest rates, it can be even more valuable. “It’s tempting to say, ‘Well, when interest rates go down, stocks are going to do well, because people are switching from low-return to higher-return assets,’” she said.
Persons: Mark Hamrick, , , Hamrick, Rodney Lake, Laura Veldkamp, Veldkamp, Jude Boudreaux, now’s, ” Jude Boudreaux, you’re, ” Boudreaux, ” DON’T, Jonathan Smoke, Cox, Edmunds, Ivan Drury Organizations: Federal, GW Investment, George Washington University School of Business, Columbia University’s Graduate School of Business, Chipping, Columbia Business, Philadelphia Fed, Federal Reserve, Mortgage, Association, Fed Locations: U.S, Orleans, New Orleans, Edmunds
watch nowWho is falling behind on credit card billsThese borrowers "may have overextended during the pandemic," the New York Fed researchers said on a press call Tuesday. Delinquent borrowers are often renters, with shorter credit histories and lower credit limits, making them more likely to be financially vulnerable and miss a payment, the researchers said. Over the last year, roughly 9.1% of credit card balances transitioned into delinquency, the New York Fed found. Among the millennials transitioning into delinquency, many also entered the labor market during the Great Recession and may be experiencing the prolonged negative effects of graduating into an economic downturn, the New York Fed researchers said. Credit card rates top 20%
Persons: homeownership, Brett House, Ted Rossman Organizations: New York Fed, Columbia Business School
"We are bombarded with shopping opportunities," said Casey Lewis, a social media trend expert and founder of trend newsletter After School. Generation Z, especially, makes shopping decisions heavily driven by TikTok and Instagram, where influencer recommendations play a very significant role, another KPMG report showed. The rise of #underconsumptioncoreTikTok's latest financial trend, #underconsumptioncore, is about making the most of what you already have and rejecting the temptation to buy more (and more and more). This time around, #underconsumptioncore stems from a number of other factors, as well, including a desire to live more intentionally and sustainably. Casey Lewis social media trend expert
Persons: Casey Lewis, Intuit Credit Karma, That's, Allison Bornstein, Brett House, underconsumption Organizations: Facebook, Intuit Credit, KPMG, Columbia Business School
"If I was using rideshares and the delivery apps and everything the way I was, I would run out of money each month," she said. For some, like Manley, it means going back to the old-fashioned way of doing certain things: shopping around for hotel deals, taking public transit more, and working out at home with fitness classes on video. AdvertisementGrant Plotkin, 26, is a Gen Zer who experienced the pre-2020 millennial subsidy as a young adult. The next iteration of the millennial subsidy might be gamifying surge pricing for groceries or a side of fries. AdvertisementHas the loss of the millennial subsidy affected your finances or lifestyle?
Persons: Sarah Manley, Manley, She's, they'd, Millennials, YipitData, Grant Plotkin, Zer, he's, Plotkin, Ubers, Brett House, that's, Bilal Baydoun, Baydoun Organizations: Service, Business, Bloomberg, Netflix, Columbia Business School, Dollar, Aldi, Big Tech, American Locations: Baltimore, it's
Read previewBefore she led the US gymnastics team to Olympic gold on Tuesday, Simone Biles was at therapy. And part of her preparation for the Paris Games involved taking care of her mental health. So just staying on top of that, it lightens the load a lot," Biles told host Hoda Kotb. Nearly 50 million Americans are experiencing a mental illness, according to 2022 data from nonprofit organization Mental Health America. AdvertisementWhile mental illness can affect anyone, Olympic athletes may be particularly susceptible to mental health issues.
Persons: , Simone Biles, Biles, Jade Carey, Jordan Chiles, Suni Lee —, Hezly Rivera, didn't, Hoda, Michael Phelps, Phelps, Naomi Osaka Organizations: Service, Business, Tokyo, Paris Games, HBO, Wimbledon, Mental Health, Columbia Business School, University of Wisconsin, Yale University, Olympic, International Olympic Committee Locations: US, American
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