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Watch CNBC's full interview with Fmr. Alcoa CEO Klaus Kleinfeld
  + stars: | 2024-11-26 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWatch CNBC's full interview with Fmr. Alcoa CEO Klaus KleinfeldKlaus Kleinfeld, Former Alcoa CEO and Former Siemens CEO, joins 'Closing Bell Overtime' to talk the impact of Trump's proposed tariffs, his new book, and more.
Persons: Klaus Kleinfeld Klaus Kleinfeld Organizations: Fmr, Alcoa, Siemens
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFmr. Alcoa CEO Klaus Kleinfeld talks impact of Trump's proposed tariffsKlaus Kleinfeld, former Alcoa CEO and former Siemens CEO, joins 'Closing Bell Overtime' to talk the impact of Trump's proposed tariffs, his new book, and more.
Persons: Klaus Kleinfeld Organizations: Alcoa, Siemens
By corporate America's (sometimes dubious) telling, AI is basically the answer to everything, including customer service. A recent Gartner survey found that nearly two-thirds of customers prefer that companies don't use AI for customer service. Related storiesEven setting aside the cost savings for companies, there are clear reasons that AI should be a good fit for customer service. "We know that there are certain aspects of customer service that AI is doing well. What's more, if every company has a mediocre AI experience, the bar might just be lowered across the board.
Persons: I've, I'm, It's, it's, Karen, I'd, Michelle Schroeder, don't, Michelle Kinch, that's, aren't, Keith McIntosh, They're, they're, Kinch, Jason Maynard, Chris Filly, Maynard, Jeff Gallino, Rodney Zemmel, they'll, , Gallino, Schroeder, We've, Emily Stewart Organizations: Corporations, Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business, Gartner, Companies, Asia Pacific, FedEx, Fortune, Santander, Siemens, McKinsey, Delta, Filly, Alexa, Business Locations: North America, Asia, Zendesk, Callvu, PolyAI
The weather is getting chilly in many parts of the Northern Hemisphere, but but cold weather doesn’t mean that you have to stop your exercise routines. According to one recent study, people who achieved this amount of exercise per week had a 31% lower risk of mortality, 27% lower risk of developing cardiovascular disease, and 12% lower risk of developing cancer compared with inactive participants. Importantly, those who achieved just half this amount (75 minutes per week) also had substantial health benefits, with a 23% lower risk of early death, a 17% lower risk of developing cardiovascular disease, and 7% lower risk of developing cancer. Are you someone used to cold weather exercise, or are you trying it for the first time? On very cold days, and especially if you are not used to cold weather exercise, go with someone else.
Persons: Leana Wen, Wen, Jordan, it’s Organizations: CNN, CNN’s, Northern, George Washington University, US Centers for Disease Control, , Jordan Siemens, Stone, Getty
Population density and topography obviously have a significant effect on construction costs. “There was also a lack of discussion over the chosen route, which could have followed existing highway corridors.”Rapidly rising construction costs have plagued major projects across the world in recent years. Signs placed on a fence by environmental activists protest against tree-felling operations for the HS2 rail link at Jones Hill Wood in Wendover, England, in April 2021. However, their efforts were in vain and only succeeded in significantly driving up construction costs. ‘Mutilated and pointless’Plans have been dropped for a proposed HS2 railway station at Meadowhall in Sheffield.
Persons: hoardings, Henry Nicholls, it’s, Christian Wolmar, , Ricardo Ferreras, , ” Ferreras, Wolmar, Chris Gorman, Wood, Mark Kerrison, Joe Giddens, Mike Kemp, Rishi Sunak, Anna Gowthorpe Organizations: CNN, Speed, Britain, WHOOSH, Station, London Times, ” Railway, CNN Travel, , Chiltern, New Economics Foundation, London Euston, Birmingham Airport, Crewe, Conservative, Labour, Birmingham, Sunak, Leeds, High Speed Rail, Hitachi, Alstom, Siemens, Euston, Treasury, Audit Office Locations: United States, Bordeaux, France, China, Japan, London, English, Birmingham, Jakarta, Bandung, London's, AFP, Britain, Ukraine, Europe, Spain, Great, England, Jones, Wendover, Buckinghamshire, Colne, Cross , Hertfordshire, Manchester, Leeds, Scotland, Wales, Euston, Crewe, Meadowhall, Sheffield, Midlands, Nottingham, Liverpool
European markets closed higher on Thursday as traders digested a slew of earnings and assessed fresh inflation data for a signal on the possible trajectory of interest rate cuts. The pan-European Stoxx 600 provisionally ended the day 1.08% higher, with all sectors and major bourses trading in the green. Shares of Burberry jumped more than 22%, after the British luxury house announced a sweeping overhaul strategy to stem declining sales. Investors are assessing the likelihood of another interest rate cut by the U.S. Federal Reserve in December after the latest U.S. inflation data. U.S. stocks were little changed Thursday, while Asia-Pacific markets traded in mixed territory overnight.
Persons: Donald Trump's Organizations: Burberry, Siemens, Bilfinger, Merck, Fincantieri, Metro Bank, Aviva, Deutsche Telekom, U.S . Federal Reserve, Federal Locations: Veon, Asia, Pacific
It's still uncertain what Donald Trump's second presidency will look like, but his first administration was highly responsive to business issues with a set way of operating, top German business executive Joe Kaeser told CNBC. "If I personally, for my company at the time, had an issue to resolve, his administration was extremely receptive," the chairman of the supervisory board of Siemens Energy said in an interview with CNBC's Annette Weisbach Thursday. Kaeser was Siemens' CEO throughout President-elect Trump's first term. Trump did "a lot of things which helped the economy" during his first four years in office, Kaeser said, noting that he believed the president-elect's tax cuts at the time were a positive. One study done at the time, however, showed that the Trump tax cuts, which were implemented in 2017, only had a limited contribution to the strong U.S. growth the following year.
Persons: It's, Donald Trump's, Joe Kaeser, CNBC's Annette Weisbach, Kaeser, Trump's, Trump Organizations: CNBC, Siemens Energy, Siemens, Trump Locations: New York
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFirst Trump administration was 'very receptive to business,' Joe Kaeser saysJoe Kaeser, chairman of the supervisory board of Siemens Energy, discusses the political turmoil in Germany and weighs in on the election of Donald Trump as U.S. president.
Persons: Trump, Joe Kaeser, Donald Trump Organizations: Siemens Energy Locations: Germany
Organic revenue growth of 1% matched expectations. Management raised the midpoint of full-year earnings guidance despite the continued in weakness in China that has been hampering top-line organic growth. Bottom Line Results were mixed, but it comes as no surprise that the quarter was negatively impacted by weakness in China. The team continues to deliver for customers and we've seen PDx reports seven quarters of high-single-digit or double-digit organic revenue growth." Pharmaceutical Diagnostics (PDx) segment — used in radiology and nuclear medicine to deliver more precise diagnoses — was particularly strong, delivering segment revenue growth of 7% organically.
Persons: Peter Arduini, Arduini, We're, James Saccaro, Saccaro, GEHC, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Martin Schutt Organizations: GE Healthcare, Revenue, LSEG, Management, Pharmaceutical Diagnostics, General Electric, Philips, Siemens, U.S . Food, Drug Administration, GE Healthcare's, Care Solutions, CNBC, Getty Locations: China, U.S, Jena , Germany
"Everyone has that problem in industrials," he said at the recent CNBC Evolve AI Opportunity event. The Google AI will offer images, videos, text and sensor readings to engineers. According to Honeywell data, 82% of companies in the industrial sector that consider themselves AI leaders are behind on adoption, with only 17% having fully launched initial AI plans. Siemens and Microsoft announced a gen AI deal for the industrial sector late last year, which included an AI copilot for use across industries. "Awareness is high, adoption is low, but there will be an inflection point," he said at the recent CNBC AI event.
Persons: Rick Osterloh, Vimal Kapur, Kapur, Suresh Venkatarayalu, Carrie Tharp, Delangue Organizations: Devices, Google, Honeywell, CNBC, Honeywell Forge, Workers, Companies, Gemini, Amazon, Nvidia, Siemens, Microsoft Locations: Mountain View , California, industrials
This report is from this week's CNBC's "Inside India" newsletter which brings you timely, insightful news and market commentary on the emerging powerhouse and the big businesses behind its meteoric rise. Over the years, the services sector of the Indian economy has grown to account for 45% of total exports, up from 30% a decade ago. The Indian government, meanwhile, has been eager to support the manufacturing sector in creating mass employment, a key economic and political challenge that the services sector alone hasn't been able to address. These companies also boast moats that make them unique compared to the large BPO firms of the last three decades. Perhaps it could also address some of the risks to employment created in the BPO sector from artificial intelligence.
Persons: hasn't, Cyient isn't, Peers, Larsen, Toubro's, Kunal Desai, Desai Organizations: Capital Economics, nab, Microsoft, Siemens, GIB Asset Management, CNBC Locations: India, London, Philippines, Mexico, Brazil, Poland, Malaysia
In addition to the Computex display, humanoid robots have come up on Nvidia's last two earnings calls. The first is self-driving cars and the second is likely to be humanoid robots. Project Groot, which the company refers to as a "moonshot" initiative, is a foundation model for humanoid robots. AdvertisementIt feels like every player aiming for humanoid robots is in it for themselves, Kapoor said. Simulators are an essential stop on the path to humanoid robots, but they don't necessarily lead to human-like perception.
Persons: Jensen, , Jensen Huang, gesturing, Elon Musk, Huang, Raul Martynek, Databank, Isaac, Tesla, That's, Sophia Velastegui, who's, William, Omniverse, Ashish Kapoor, Kapoor, Jonathan Stephens, Martynek, Velastegui Organizations: Service, Nvidia, Apple, Google, Microsoft, BMW, Boston Dynamics, BYD Electronics, Siemens, sunsetted, Foundations, Grid, Scaled Foundations, Star Locations: Taipei, Taiwan, Computex
CNN —Billing itself as the world’s “first holographic communications platform,” US startup Proto is beaming life-size, “3D” video into universities, hotels and medical centers. The boxes can reproduce pre-recorded video as well as a live feed, and any 4K camera, including an iPhone, can be used as the source. Nussbaum, whose background is in radio and podcasting, started Proto in 2018. In 2023, video of actor William Shatner was beamed from Los Angeles to the Advertising Week APAC event in Sydney, Australia. A similar technology launched by Dutch company Holoconnects has been deployed at hotels in Scandinavia, and used for advertising by BMW.
Persons: CNN —, , William Shatner, , David Nussbaum, Nussbaum, Holoconnects, Gary Burnett, Proto, Clay Jackson, Crystal Freeman, Organizations: CNN, Inc, Amazon, Verizon, Siemens, Accenture, Walmart, NFL, JFK, Beverly Wilshire, BMW, Google, HP, Cisco, MIT, Vanderbilt, Stanford, University of Loughborough, Loughborough University, West Cancer Center, University of Tennessee College of Medicine Locations: Los Angeles, Orlando , Florida, Sydney, Australia, New, Beverly Hills , California, Scandinavia, Webex, Central Florida, Memphis , Tennessee, New Jersey
The move prompted Wall Street giants Barclays and Citi to adopt a more optimistic stance on global cyclical stocks. Barclays believes the Federal Reserve's actions are "clearly designed to pull out all the stops to achieve a soft landing" for the economy. Barclays strategists noted that "cyclicals typically rebounded steadily after the Fed started its rate cut cycle ... as long as it was not followed by a recession." Citi strategists share a similar outlook for European stocks. "The scale of the downgrades has become so extreme of late that we're now approaching a point where negative ERI may be a useful contrarian indicator," the Citi strategists said.
Persons: Emmanuel Cau, Beata Manthey, we're, Safran, Atlas, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Federal Reserve, Wall Street, Barclays, Citi, Fed, Siemens, BBVA, ING, Holcim, ASM Locations: United States
Automation is the biggest challenge for Siemens, says CFO
  + stars: | 2024-09-24 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAutomation is the biggest challenge for Siemens, says CFOSiemens CFO Ralf Thomas discusses the company's growth strategy, and explains how the firm will attempt to mitigate risks caused by falling demand in China.
Persons: Ralf Thomas Organizations: Automation, Siemens Locations: China
Constellation Energy stock is still rising after the power company's landmark announcement last week that it plans to restart the Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania. The operational risk to bring the plant back online in 2028 appears manageable, Morgan Stanley told clients in a note on Monday. Renewable energy and natural gas stocks could also indirectly benefit from nuclear deals, according to Morgan Stanley analyst Stephen Byrd. Renewable stocks such as AES Corp. , NextEra Energy and First Solar could get a tailwind for the same reason, according to Morgan Stanley. CEO John Ketchum said the company is looking at restarting the Duane Arnold nuclear plant in Iowa.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, David Arcaro, Arcaro, Stephen Byrd, Byrd, NextEra, John Ketchum, Duane Arnold, Wells, Neil Kalton, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Constellation Energy, Constellation, Microsoft, Vistra Corp, Vistra, Public Service Enterprise Group, Tech, . Companies, GE Vernova, Siemens Energy, Mitsubishi Power, NRG Energy, AES Corp, NextEra Energy Locations: Pennsylvania, Iowa, Wells Fargo
Almost everyone else seems to want to deploy AI in some meaningful way but don't seem to know how. It's available on HP 's AI personal computers right now but hasn't really attracted a lot of interest yet — good for Club company Best Buy 's forward earnings. For some companies, companies like CVS , this is a no brainer. One that can build things or get things or just give you a cup of your coffee. I don't know what will happen to people who are doing this now.
Persons: Jensen Huang, Marc Benioff, Copilot, hasn't, Uber, San Francisco —, Amazon's, Benioff, Benioff's, Agentforce, Tesla, Elon, Donald Trump, Pat Gelsinger, gunning, Lisa Su, Jensen, Su, wasn't, Nvidia's Blackwell, Blackwell, Mike Sievert, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Carlos Barria Organizations: Microsoft, Club, Nvidia, Oracle, HP, Devices, AMD, Saks Fifth, CVS, Siemens, Starbucks, Intel, Qualcomm, Arm Holdings, Enterprise, Constellation Energy, GE Vernova, Apple, Mobile, Jim Cramer's Charitable, CNBC Locations: San Francisco, Atlanta, Austin , Texas, Dreamforce, bailiwick, Eaton, Dover, California
NBC News interviewed 10 women who say they gave birth with Baker, two in Wisconsin before 2014 and eight in Mexico in the years since. On social media, accounts with the usernames “Heather Baker Midwife” and “heatherbakermidwife,” one of which had her photo, sent “cease and desist” messages to Nosek and another former client. John Beard, a spokesperson for the Wisconsin licensing agency, declined to answer questions about Baker, citing an ongoing investigation. After an initial check when Baker arrived, Nosek told NBC News, Baker checked his heartbeat only four times after her labor began. Baker, Nosek said, tried to resuscitate him.
Persons: Jennifer Nosek’s, Heather Baker, Nosek, , Nosek’s, Baker, isn’t, Rene Lamos Nosek, she’d, Baker’s, Baker didn’t, , ” Caroline Clancy, John Beard, didn’t, Jordan, ” Nosek, “ I’m, Rene Lemos, Joaquin, wouldn’t, Stephanie Mitchell, ” Baker, Mexico’s, Aviva Romm, Romm, Misoprostol, Anna Moneymaker, aren’t, Gynecologists, Luciana Suarez, Luciana Suarez Luciana Suarez, Suarez, Luciana Suarez “, Heather, ” Suarez, ” Misoprostol, Becky Whitmore, Kate McLean, “ That’s, ” Robin Benedict, Allan Spencer, Robin Benedict Heather Baker, Robin Benedict's, Robin Benedict Robin Benedict, Benedict, Jennifer Nosek, Laurita, Lemos, Lemos couldn’t, ” Lemos, He’s, Baker scribbled, who’d, they’d, Julian Zaire, Jackie Dives, Sayulita, Luciana Suarez’s, Thai Shaffer, Julian, you’ll Organizations: Canadian, NBC, FBI, Wisconsin Department of Safety, Professional Services, NBC News, Milwaukee, Jordan Siemens, Getty, Services, American College of Obstetricians, OB, PayPal, American College of, Locations: Sayulita, Mexico, Nosek’s, Wisconsin, Nayarit, Mexican, U.S, Canada, Alabama, contrx, Washington, American, Nosek, British Columbia, Joaquin
In a Tuesday interview with CNBC's Jim Cramer, Siemens USA CEO Barbara Humpton detailed how her company's digital twin program lets builders test models virtually before starting production. Based in Germany, Siemens develops hardware and software for several industries like electrical infrastructure and transportation, as well as digital twin technology for manufacturing facilities. Humpton said digital twins produce a "digital representation of any physical object" and incorporate the laws of physics. Humpton highlighted the company's "smart infrastructure" initiative, which she said is Siemens USA's largest and fastest-growing business. Smart infrastructure technology enables widespread electrification and data center creation, she said.
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Barbara Humpton, Humpton Organizations: Siemens USA, Siemens, NASA, Las Vegas Locations: Germany, Mars, U.S, New York, Los Angeles, North America, United States
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailSiemens CEO Barbara Humpton sits down with Jim Cramer at the Dreamforce ConferenceSiemens President and CEO Barbara Humpton joins 'Mad Money' host Jim Cramer to talk how the company is powering data centers, its new New York plant, partnering with Salesforce and more.
Persons: Barbara Humpton, Jim Cramer, Salesforce Organizations: Siemens, Dreamforce Conference Siemens Locations: New York
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailSiemens CEO Barbara Humpton talks how Digital Twin can help lower costsSiemens President and CEO Barbara Humpton joins 'Mad Money' host Jim Cramer to talk how the company is powering data centers, its new New York plant, partnering with Salesforce and more.
Persons: Barbara Humpton, Jim Cramer, Salesforce Organizations: Siemens Locations: New York
The 12 core Investing Club portfolio stocks that we identified at our Annual Meeting in February are the 12 we still stand by. Wells Fargo Why we own it We bought Wells Fargo as a turnaround story under CEO Charlie Scharf. Why we own it GE Healthcare is the global leader in medical imaging, diagnostics, and digital solutions in health care. Fed interest rate cuts can also help hospitals finance the MRI and CT scan machines that GE Healthcare is known for. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER .
Persons: Jim Cramer, Eli Lilly, Jim, Wells, Charlie Scharf, He's, Scharf, Wells Fargo, Lilly, Jim Cramer's Organizations: Apple, Costco, GE Healthcare, Linde, Microsoft, Nvidia, TJX Companies, Bank of America, Citigroup, GE, General Electric, Philips, Siemens, Jim Cramer's Charitable, CNBC Locations: Danaher, Eaton, Wells Fargo
Jim doesn't see a need to step in first thing Thursday morning and buy the dip. Through its Nvidia AI Enterprise service, Nvidia is in the process of building out a potentially massive software business. Quarterly commentary During Nvidia's fiscal second quarter, better-than-expected sales were driven by strength in all key segments, including a Data Center segment revenue record. Regarding China, Kress said, "Data Center revenue in China grew sequentially in Q2 and is a significant contributor to our Data Center revenue. Guidance Taking a closer look at guidance, Nvidia's fiscal third quarter may not have beaten the Street's estimates by the magnitude some were hoping for, but it's far from disappointing.
Persons: Lindy, Triple Lindy, Jensen Huang, Hopper, Blackwell, Jim Cramer, Jim doesn't, Colette Kress, Kress, it's, inferencing, ChatGPT, Cloud prem, Nvidia Isaac, Jim Cramer's, Jim, Andrej Sokolow Organizations: Nvidia, Revenue, Triple, Moore's, Hopper, Blackwell, Amazon Web Services, Google, Enterprise, Devices, Intel, Apple, Data Center, Networking, Management, Data, Centers, Automotive, Siemens, Nvidia Blackwell, Mercedes, Benz, Nvidia Omniverse, CNBC, Getty Locations: China, Boston, Silicon Valley
15 November 2023, Bavaria, Munich: Flags with the word "Siemens" in front of the company's headquarters. Comparable orders meanwhile declined 15% from the same quarter a year ago, hitting 19.8 billion, Siemens said. Siemens CEO Roland Busch told CNBC on Thursday that the company's performance during the quarter was "very, very strong." The company attributed its growth in the third quarter to strong demand in its electrification and industrial software businesses, but noted the automation business remained "challenging." There was an "exceptionally high order growth in the software business driven by a number of large contract wins for licensed software," the company said, with profitability growth more than offsetting a profit decline in automation.
Persons: Karl, Josef Hildenbrand, Roland Busch Organizations: Siemens, Getty Images, CNBC, Smart Infrastructure Locations: Bavaria, Munich, London
Many people consume alcohol to relax and relieve stress, which are some of the top reasons people travel, too. How is sober travel discussed on TikTok? Sentiment in the past year shows that among social media interactions 32% is positive, 38% is neutral and 30% is negative. The ranking, however, isn't a list of countries where alcohol sales are banned — places like Brunei, Saudi Arabia and Iran. Costa Rica ranked high on the list of "sober travel" destinations, in part, because of its outdoor activities and national parks.
Persons: He's, Virgin Mary, Dublin's, Artur Widak, Jordan – Organizations: Airports, CNBC Travel, Virgin, Nurphoto, YouTube, Social, Costa Rica, Siemens, Digitalvision, Getty, UNESCO, Heritage Locations: Koh Samui, Thailand, Brunei, Texas, Asia, United States, United Kingdom, Canada, South Africa, Australia, Saudi Arabia, Iran, U.S, Nepal, Morocco, Costa Rica, Turkey, Greece, Indonesia, Italy, Singapore, India, InsureMyTrip, North America
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