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Swedish automaker Volvo Cars on Wednesday announced deputy CEO Björn Annwall will step down from his current role as part of a management reshuffle designed to increase simplicity and collaboration in the organization. It comes shortly after Volvo Cars abandoned its near-term goal of selling only electric vehicles (EVs), citing a need to be "pragmatic and flexible." "In a rapidly changing world, we need to ensure our organisation is equipped to navigate a more challenging market," Jim Rowan, CEO at Volvo Cars, said in a written statement. "We are now regrouping our commercial leadership team with a focus on making Volvo Cars even stronger with increased speed and efficiency," he added. Volvo Cars said it was taking these steps to navigate challenges facing the automotive industry, such as headwinds driven by geopolitical and macroeconomic uncertainties, market sentiment, rapid technology shifts and supply chains.
Persons: Björn Annwall, Jim Rowan, Annwall, Arek Nowinski, Gretchen Saegh, Fleming, Oscar Bertilsson Olsborg Organizations: Volvo, Wednesday, Volvo Cars Locations: China
Insider Today: Consultants hit the exits
  + stars: | 2024-10-06 | by ( Matt Turner | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +5 min
This post originally appeared in the Insider Today newsletter. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . This week's dispatchHot jobs reportgradyreese/Getty, Tyler Le/BIThe US economy added way more jobs in September than expected. AdvertisementThe jobs report on Friday showed 254,000 jobs added, way ahead of the 147,000 expected, while unemployment dropped to 4.1%. Here's what it all means:Rates: The strong job numbers likely mean a longer wait for lower rates.
Persons: , Tyler Le, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Harris, Alyssa Powell, Marc Rowan, Apollo, Rowan, Natalie Ammari, Scooping, Van Cleef, Morgan Stanley Organizations: Business, Service, UC Berkeley, Fed, Dow, Deloitte, Accenture, Reuters, Apollo Management, Apollo, JPMorgan Locations: Zegna, Bridgewater
Rowan said the firm is testing new tactics to motivate employees to "play to win." Here's how and why the firm has turned to frozen yogurt and 4:30 a.m. wakeups. 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 . Advertisement"We believe that assets are what is going to be scarce rather than capital," Rowan said, referring to an environment of more limited investment opportunities.
Persons: Rowan, , Marc Rowan, We've, Lehman, I've, They're, it's Organizations: Service, New, Apollo, Nvidia, that's
AdvertisementThe biggest player in non-bank loans has set a massive new goal for itself: more than doubling its $562 billion private lending business to $1.2 trillion in five years. At $1.2 trillion, Apollo will manage as much in loans as JPMorgan Chase last year, according to data tracker Statista. Apollo plans to more than double both its private credit and equity businesses by 2029, which would bring total assets under management to roughly $1.5 trillion. At its last investor day in 2023, it set a goal to hit $1 trillion in total assets under management, including private loans, by 2026. AdvertisementHere's how Apollo plans to grow to over $1 trillion in private lending alone.
Persons: Marc Rowan, , Blackstone, Rowan, John Zito, JPMorgan Chase, Jamie Dimon Organizations: Service, KKR, Apollo's AG InBev, InBev, Intel, Apollo, JPMorgan
Apollo CEO on the retirement investment opportunities
  + stars: | 2024-09-23 | 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 EmailApollo CEO on the retirement investment opportunitiesCNBC's David Faber sits down with Apollo Global CEO Marc Rowan for a CNBC Leaders special to discuss the Fed's latest move, the odds of recession, government spending, retirement investment opportunities and more.
Persons: CNBC's David Faber, Marc Rowan Organizations: Apollo Global, CNBC
Marc Rowan on leadership & the future of Apollo
  + stars: | 2024-09-23 | 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 EmailMarc Rowan on leadership & the future of ApolloCNBC's David Faber sits down with Apollo Global CEO Marc Rowan to discuss the Fed's latest move, the odds of recession, government spending, his future plans for Apollo and more.
Persons: Marc Rowan, Apollo CNBC's David Faber Organizations: Apollo Global, Apollo
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailApollo Global CEO: A year from now, you won't be able to tell the difference between public and privateCNBC's David Faber sits down with Apollo Global CEO Marc Rowan to discuss the Fed's latest move, the odds of recession, government spending, and more. You can watch the full interview on CNBC PRO.
Persons: David Faber, Marc Rowan Organizations: Apollo, Apollo Global, CNBC PRO
Volvo Cars, which is owned by China's Geely Holding, had been among the first legacy carmakers to promise a complete switch to EVs. The firm said its long-term aim remains to become a fully electric carmaker. The target replaces a 2021 pledge for Volvo Cars' lineup to be fully electric by the end of the decade. The move means Volvo Cars follows in the footsteps of other industry players in scaling back its EV ambitions. Shares of Volvo Cars traded more than 4% lower Wednesday.
Persons: China's Geely, carmakers, Mercedes, Jim Rowan Organizations: Volvo, China's, Volvo Cars, Benz Group, Volkswagen Locations: Germany
Read previewDealmakers have always been the stars of private equity. AdvertisementKevin Desai, partner and private equity sector leader at PwC PWCBut in the current climate, portfolio-operations professionals are gaining esteem. AdvertisementPrivate equity 3.0Rising interest rates nearly two and a half years ago ushered in a new economic reality that hit private equity firms right in the pocket. Since private equity relies on debt to boost returns, the first option is off the table. These people are taking their talents to private equity firms to manage smaller companies using an already proven playbook for technological transformation.
Persons: , you've, Marc Rowan, Rowan, Kevin Desai, Desai, I've, What's, they're, quants, we've Organizations: Service, Business, PricewaterhouseCoopers, University of Chicago, Walmart, Nike, Harvard Business Locations: dealmaking
Read previewBritish Airways released its newest in-flight safety video in late July, styled as a classic British period drama, along the lines of "Bridgerton" and "Pride and Prejudice." It includes over 40 British Airways staff and was filmed in grand country houses across the UK. Courtesy of British Airways. However, the video does have drawbacks. Courtesy of British Airways.
Persons: , Sharon Maguire, Bridget Jones, Darcy, Shem Malmquist, Guy Gratton, Business Insider's Taylor Rains, Rowan Atkinson's Mr, Bean, Gordon Ramsay Organizations: Service, British Airways, British Airways staff, Business, YouTube, The Daily Telegraph, Singapore Airlines, Aviation Safety, Aviation, Cranfield University, Allegiant Air, Virgin America Locations: British, London
Meet peak summertime Zuck
  + stars: | 2024-07-24 | by ( Kwan Wei Kevin Tan | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +1 min
On Tuesday, Mark Zuckerberg hit the interview circuit to promote Meta's latest AI model, Llama 3.1. The Meta CEO had a very visible sunglasses tan in one of his interviews. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Zuckerberg gave an interview to AI newsletter writer Rowan Cheung on Tuesday, after Meta released its latest AI model, Llama 3.1, on Tuesday. While the Meta CEO was there to hype his company's latest AI offering, the interview was just as notable for Zuckerberg's visible sunglasses tan.
Persons: Mark Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg, , Rowan Cheung Organizations: Service, Meta
Read previewMark Zuckerberg sounds tired of having to navigate Apple's restrictions. "One of my formative experiences has been building our services constrained by what Apple will let us build on their platforms," Zuckerberg wrote. Zuckerberg expanded on his critique of Apple in an interview with AI news YouTuber Rowan Cheung, also published Tuesday. "Compared to the Apple approach of coupling your operating system with the device, the Windows approach was a more open ecosystem," he said. AdvertisementAnd Zuckerberg hopes Meta will also be on the winning side.
Persons: , Zuckerberg, OpenAI, Rowan Cheung, doesn't, David Wehner, Zuck, Meta, I've Organizations: Service, Apple, Business, Meta, Apple Intelligence
Shares of Volvo Cars rose sharply on Thursday after the company reported a jump in annual operating profit for the second quarter. Core operating profit for the quarter came in at 8.2 billion Swedish kronor ($776 million), 28% higher than in the same quarter a year earlier, the company said in a statement. Volvo Cars' revenue dipped slightly in the second quarter, coming in at 101.5 billion Swedish kronor from 102.2 billion Swedish kronor over the same period of last year. In the first quarter of 2024, Volvo Cars had reported a 2% year-on-year decline in revenue. First-quarter operating profit had come in at 6.8 billion Swedish kronor, while retail car sales amounted to 182,687.
Persons: Jim Rowan Organizations: Volvo, Global, U.S, Volvo Cars Locations: Shanghai, China, London
Tom Trovato and his wife, Trish, paid more than $20,000 and waited two years to experience Viking’s inaugural cruise up the Mississippi River. Leaving in September 2022, it was supposed be a two-week excursion from New Orleans to St. Paul, Minn., a trip of some 1,800 miles. Though they got a full refund, the Trovatos, who live in Surprise, Ariz., have no plans to try again. “If I live to be 125, it might be on my bucket list,” said Mr. Trovato, 79. The Mississippi River is central to American identity, with all the contradictions that entails.
Persons: Tom Trovato, Trish, , Trovato, , Lewis, Clark, Organizations: Minn Locations: Mississippi, New Orleans, St, Paul, Memphis, Viking Mississippi
Australia is facing an egg supply crunch thanks to bird flu outbreaks — and it's led McDonald's to trim breakfast hours by 90 minutes, also pushing supermarkets to restrict purchases to two cartons per consumer. Citing "industry challenges," McDonald's on Tuesday announced that it was temporarily serving breakfast until 10.30am instead of midday across Australia. The government added that it is currently responding to outbreaks of the H7 high pathogenicity avian influenza (HPAI) at 11 poultry farms. The Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) noted that there is currently no evidence that people can contact the virus through "properly prepared" food. "Avian influenza (bird flu) is not a food safety concern and it is safe to eat properly handled and cooked chicken meat, eggs and egg products," the organization added.
Persons: it's, Murray Watt, McDonald's, Rowan McMonnies, there's, McMonnies Organizations: U.S, Australia Facebook, Coles, Woolworths, Food Standards, Food Standards Australia New Zealand Locations: Australia, Food Standards Australia
McDonald’s has cut breakfast service timings by 90 minutes, the company said, after a shortage of eggs caused by bird flu outbreaks that have led to the slaughter of about 1.5 million chickens. Australia is battling outbreaks of several strains of highly pathogenic avian influenza that have struck 11 poultry facilities, most of them egg farms, in its southeast since May. None of the strains are the H5N1 variant of bird flu that has spread through bird and mammal populations worldwide, infecting billions of animals and a small number of humans. “Consumers can be assured there’s still over 20 million hens under the care of hundreds of egg farmers across Australia that will continue to work hard to ensure there’s eggs on shelves,” he added. Bird flu spreads to farmed animals from wild birds.
Persons: McDonald’s, ” McDonald’s, Rowan McMonnies, there’s Organizations: Good, Facebook Locations: Canberra, Australia
Some 900 of PwC's top 1,000 consulting clients are now working with the firm on incorporating AI into their businesses, a spokesperson told Business Insider. Even as some companies focus on how AI might rewrite corporate playbooks, some businesses are asking consultants how to get started. Advertisement"Many CIOs are afraid that they don't have the right skills," he told BI. Where to beginMany companies are still determining how they might use AI and GenAI, according to several consultants. This enables greater seamlessness down the line, and that is where the magic lies," he told BI.
Persons: , Ben Ellencweig, Allison Bailey, Bailey, Greg Sward, They're, Jim Rowan, Rowan, Vlad Lukic, Roy Singh, Joe Atkinson, Atkinson, Deloitte's Rowan, Bain's Singh, PwC's Atkinson, he's, Singh Organizations: Service, Business, McKinsey & Company, Boston Consulting, KPMG US, Deloitte Consulting, Bain & Company, Companies, Carrefour, & $
CNN —An early analysis of a sample collected from the asteroid Bennu suggests that the space rock had an unexpectedly water-rich past — and it may have even splintered off from an ancient ocean world. But the compound from the Bennu sample is purer and has larger grains. Rocks and dust were collected from asteroid Bennu and returned to Earth by the OSIRIS-REx mission. Erika Blumenfeld/Joseph Aebersold/NASA“The sample we returned is the largest reservoir of unaltered asteroid material on Earth right now,” Lauretta said. “Each week, analysis by the OSIRIS-REx Sample Analysis Team provides new and sometimes surprising findings that are helping place important constraints on the origin and evolution of Earth-like planets.”
Persons: REx, , Jason Dworkin, OSIRIS, Connolly, Dante Lauretta, , Erika Blumenfeld, Joseph Aebersold, ” Lauretta, Nick Timms, Harold Connolly Jr Organizations: CNN, NASA, Planetary, Goddard Space Flight, Japan Aerospace, Earth, University of Arizona, Bennu, Curtin University’s School of, Planetary Sciences, Rowan University’s School of Earth Locations: Greenbelt , Maryland, Tucson, Glassboro , New Jersey
Apple | Spotify | Amazon | YouTube Listen to and follow ‘Hard Fork’This week, Google found itself in more turmoil, this time over its new AI Overviews feature and a trove of leaked internal documents. Then Josh Batson, a researcher at the A.I. And finally, we take a look at recent developments in A.I. safety, after Casey’s early access to OpenAI’s new souped-up voice assistant was taken away for safety reasons. Guests:Josh Batson, research scientist at AnthropicAdditional Reading:
Persons: Josh Batson, Claude Organizations: Apple, Spotify, Google
Tighter bank lending means more opportunities for private lenders to lend and make outsize returns on their loans. Financial industry titans Jamie Dimon and Marc Rowan have been trading opposing views on the burgeoning sector for the last year. Last year, Rowan responded to Dimon's comments that higher capital requirements for banks had private lenders like Apollo "dancing in the streets." AdvertisementRowan on Thursday responded by saying that the private-credit industry helps reduce systemic risk caused by the traditional banking industry. "Jamie is an amazing representative of the banking industry," Rowan said.
Persons: , Jamie Dimon, Marc Rowan, Dimon, JPMorgan Chase, Rowan, Apollo, Jamie, Blackstone, — I've, Bernstein, Dimon's Organizations: Service, Financial, JPMorgan, Business, Bank of America Global Research, Apollo Locations: New York City
Apple | Spotify | Amazon | YouTube Listen to and follow ‘Hard Fork’This week, more drama at OpenAI: The company wanted Scarlett Johansson to be a voice of GPT-4o, she said no … but something got lost in translation. Then we talk with Noland Arbaugh, the first person to get Elon Musk’s Neuralink device implanted in his brain, about how his brain-computer interface has changed his life. And finally, the Times’s Karen Weise reports back from Microsoft’s developer conference, where the big buzz was that the company’s new line of A.I. PCs will record every single thing you do on the device. Guests:Noland Arbaugh, the first Neuralink patientKaren Weise, technology correspondent for The New York TimesAdditional Reading:
Persons: Scarlett Johansson, Noland Arbaugh, Elon Musk’s, Karen Weise Organizations: Apple, Spotify, The New York Times
Mr. Eastman is the first of 18 defendants to come before a judge in the Arizona case, which was brought by Kris Mayes, the state attorney general. Mr. Eastman faces charges of fraud, forgery and conspiracy. Rudolph W. Giuliani, formerly Mr. Trump’s personal lawyer, has also been charged in the case. The arraignment of Mr. Eastman took place at a large courthouse complex in Phoenix Friday morning. Mr. Eastman appeared briefly before a judge and pleaded not guilty.
Persons: John Eastman, Donald J, Trump’s, Trump, Eastman, Kris Mayes, Boris Epshteyn, Mark Meadows, Rudolph W, Giuliani Organizations: White House Locations: Phoenix, Arizona
Apple | Spotify | Amazon | YouTube Listen to and follow ‘Hard Fork’This week, OpenAI unveiled GPT-4o, its newest A.I. It has an uncannily emotive voice that everybody is talking about. Then, we break down the biggest announcements from Google IO, including the launch of A.I. overviews, a major change to search that threatens the way the entire web functions. And finally, Kevin and Casey discuss the weirdest headlines from the week in another round of HatGPT.
Persons: OpenAI, Kevin, Casey Organizations: Apple, Spotify, Google
While many of the effects of climate change, including heat waves, droughts and wildfires, are already with us, some of the most alarming consequences are hiding beneath the surface of the ocean. David Gelles and Raymond Zhong, who both cover climate for The New York Times, explain just how close we might be to a tipping point.
Persons: David Gelles, Raymond Zhong Organizations: New York Times
Brooke Shields, who has two college-age daughters, is learning to deal with empty nest syndrome. However, she says that New York City's high cost of living might help keep her kids at home for longer. NEW LOOK 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 . "You know, the minute my husband is on any type of work trip or gone or something, they still sleep in the bed with me," Shields told cohost Julia Cunningham.
Persons: Brooke Shields, , Rowan Francis Henchy, Grier Hammond Henchy, Jess Cagle, Julia Cunningham, Chris Henchy, Shields, cohost Julia Cunningham Organizations: York, Service, Business
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