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Digital render of NEOM's The Line project in Saudi Arabia The Line, NEOMIn Saudi Arabia's northwestern desert, a sprawling construction site replete with cranes and pile drivers sits encircled by a recently-built road. The changes come as the Saudi deficit grows and the outlook for oil demand, along with global oil prices, sees sustained lows. Construction for The Line project in Saudi Arabia's NEOM, October 2024 Giles Pendleton, The Line at NEOMThat begs the question: does Saudi Arabia have enough money to meet its lofty goals? Saudi Arabia has poured tens of billions into projects that have yet to hint of any financial returns." Saudi Arabia has an A/A-1 credit rating with a positive outlook from S&P Global Ratings and an A+ rating with a stable outlook from Fitch.
Persons: Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia's NEOM, Giles Pendleton, Andrew Leber, Leber, Mohammed Al, Jadaan Organizations: Saudi, Public Investment Fund, CNBC, Tulane University, Saudi Finance, Fitch, , P Global, Al Locations: Saudi Arabia, NEOM, Saudi, Neom, Saudi Arabia's, Riyadh
San Francisco's Mayor-elect Daniel Lurie has begun tapping tech heavyweights and business leaders to help with his goal of overhauling the city's image. "He wants to put down roots here in San Francisco. The city can't have all its eggs in one basket and needs to expand into other business sectors as well, Lurie said. "We will go recruit companies from all sectors to come back to San Francisco," Lurie said. A fully-staffed police department and 911 dispatch office will be necessary to help bring businesses and workers back to the city, Lurie said.
Persons: Daniel Lurie, Sam Altman, Ned Segal, Lurie, Levi Strauss, I've Organizations: Francisco's Mayor, London, CNBC Locations: San Francisco, Francisco
AdvertisementUkraine said on Monday that it found Western-made parts inside North Korean ballistic missiles. Ukraine's military intelligence agency said that it found Western-made parts inside North Korea's KN-23 and KN-24 short-range ballistic missiles. Kyiv said that it had previously found Western technology in the North Korean missiles. The Monday statement marks Ukraine's latest announcement on the finding of Western-made parts inside weapons used by Russia in this war. NATO said the introduction of North Korean troops into the war marked a "significant escalation" in the grinding conflict.
Persons: HUR, Organizations: North, XP, Anadolu, Getty, North Korean, Korean, NATO Locations: Ukraine, Russia, Kyiv, Europe, Russian, North Korea, China, Japan, Switzerland, British, North Korean, DPRK, Iran, Pyongyang, Moscow, Russia's, Kursk
New York CNN —Iced coffee just isn’t the same when you make it at home. This year, Keurig Dr Pepper launched a machine that is dedicated to iced coffee, advertising a drink “as cold as the coffee shops” in three minutes or less for $199. But there’s science behind why iced coffee is so much better at coffee shops, and current single-serve espresso machine innovations don’t meet that quality despite their marketing. And iced coffee mania comes at a time when coffee production is at risk of surging prices as factors like climate change could slash the global supply. Almost a quarter of Americans enjoy their coffee cold, according to this fall’s National Coffee Data Trends report.
Persons: Keurig Dr Pepper, Nescafé, ” Christopher Hendon, ” David Rennie, Coffee, Jennifer Creevy, ” Creevy, , It’s, ” Rennie, Nestlé, “ It’s, Dr Pepper, they’re, CNN’s Erika Tulfo Organizations: New, New York CNN, Nestle, , University of Oregon, CNN, International Coffee Organization, United Nations, Nestlé Coffee, National Coffee Association Locations: New York, Australia, China, Americano
In 2029, the Oriental Land Company, which owns Tokyo Disney Resort, will launch a Disney cruise ship out of Japan. So to bring the brand over in terms of a cruise ship is again another brilliant move on their part. Occupancy is high on Disney ships, at 98% across the five existing ships in fiscal year 2024, according to a company fact sheet. Bigger players, such as Carnival Corporation, Royal Caribbean Group and Norwegian Cruise Line, have more ships in their fleet than Disney Cruise Line and have been in the business longer. Royal Caribbean's Icon of the Seas is currently the world's largest cruise ship, and it's loaded with family friendly attractions.
Persons: “ Coco, ” That’s, , Beci Mahnken, Kent Phillips, Mahnken, Kyle Valenta, Disney, ” Valenta, , ” Mahnken, Thomas Mazloum, ” Mazloum, Joe Raedle, Valenta Organizations: CNN, , MEI, Disney, Cruise Lines International Association, Cruise, Oceaneer Club, Disney Treasure, Disney Disney, Oriental Land Company, Tokyo Disney Resort, Hong Kong Disney, Tokyo Disney …, Shanghai Disney, Disney Cruise, Geographic, Disney Vacation, Carnival Corporation, Royal Caribbean Group, Royal Locations: Asia, Singapore, Tokyo, Japan, Hong Kong, Shanghai, It’s, Hawaii, Royal Caribbean
NYSEThis report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. What you need to know todayWinning week for marketsMajor U.S. indexes rose on Friday to end the week in the green, despite mega-cap stocks Nvidia and Alphabet shares dropping. [PRO] Interest rates back in focusThis week, the October personal consumption expenditures price index, out Wednesday, will dominate attention. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was 2% higher for the week and the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite both climbed around 1.7%.
Persons: GOOG, Donald Trump, Scott Bessent, Bessent, Kevin Warsh, Marc Rowan, Sir Richard Branson, Russell, Sam Stovall, Sundeep Gantori, — CNBC's Pia Singh, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, NYSE, CNBC, U.S, Trump, Treasury, Fed, Anthropic Amazon, COP29, Virgin, U.S . Federal Reserve, Federal, Market, Nvidia, U.S . Department of Justice, Big Tech, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Super Micro Company, CFRA Research, NVIDIA, UBS Locations: New York City, Anthropic, Azerbaijan
But it needs to invest more in quantity if it wants to defend against Russia, warfare experts said. Russia's invasion of Ukraine is showing the West the value of quantity over quality. AdvertisementAnd in the aftermath of the Cold War, Western stockpiles of weaponry diminished and industry shrunk, leaving it less prepared to build large quantities of munitions and equipment. Advertisement"Assuming that you don't decisively defeat the Russians in the opening phase of the war," Barros said, "you're going to burn through all your ATACMS and HIMARS missiles and artillery ammunition." In an image taken from a video distributed by the Russian Defense Ministry Press Service in October, a Russian 120mm mortar crew fires toward a Ukrainian position.
Persons: Zelenskyy, Mick Ryan, George Barros, Abrams, Michael O'Hanlon, Barros, ANATOLII STEPANOV, that's, isn't, O'Hanlon, William Alberque, Alberque Organizations: Australian Army, Institute for, NATO, American, Brookings Institution, Getty, Stimson Center, Russian Defense Ministry Press Service, AP Locations: Ukraine, Western, Russia, China, West, Soviet, Ukraine Russia, Russian, Ukrainian, North Korea, Iran
London CNN —Thyssenkrupp Steel has announced plans to eliminate 11,000 jobs by the end of this decade — about 40% of its workforce — becoming the latest German industrial giant to opt for drastic action to prop up its fortunes. “Increasingly, (global) overcapacity and the resulting rise in cheap imports, particularly from Asia, are placing a considerable strain on competitiveness,” Thyssenkrupp Steel said in a statement. Thyssenkrupp, Germany’s largest steel producer, joins the country’s biggest manufacturer Volkswagen in setting out a major overhaul to cut costs and bolster competitiveness. The German automaker also plans to close at least three factories in its home country and lay off tens of thousands of staff. “Locational weaknesses” include high energy costs, onerous red tape, and outdated physical and digital infrastructure.
Persons: Steel, carmaker Ford Organizations: London CNN, Thyssenkrupp, European, European Commission, Volkswagen, Federation of German Industries, Boston Consulting Group, German Economic Institute Locations: Asia, Ukraine, German, Europe, Germany, United Kingdom, Thyssenkrupp
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailIves: This tech market will be on fire as the AI revolution hits its next phase. Dan Ives, Global Head of Technology Research at Wedbush Securities, discusses the tech sector's strong performance despite NVIDIA's earnings stumble. He upgrades several AI-focused software companies, including Snowflake and Elastic, predicting significant growth driven by the AI revolution.
Persons: Dan Ives Organizations: Global, of Technology Research, Wedbush Securities
Budgeted salary increases for 2025 across Southeast Asia are expected to be higher than in 2024, according to a new report. As the end of the year approaches, the budgeted salary increases for 2025 across Southeast Asia are projected to be higher than in 2024, according to a November report by professional services firm Aon. For example, Southeast Asia has been "a sandbox environment for a lot of technology companies, i.e. in Singapore, to be setting up shop, so it is attracting capital... and then that creates a demand for talent to serve this growth," Chawla said. Here's how much salary budgets are projected to increase in 2025 across six Southeast Asian countries, according to Aon.
Persons: Rahul Chawla, Chawla, It's, Cheng Wan Hua Organizations: Global, Management, CNBC Locations: Southeast Asia, Aon, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Asia
AdvertisementNvidia CEO Jensen Huang met his wife Lori Huang at Oregon State University. Huang said he promised her he'd be CEO by 30 to ensure she'd marry him. When Jensen Huang met his wife in college, the odds weren't in his favor. Huang said in a 2010 New York Times interview that he also waited tables at Denny's while he was a student. The CEO also credits his wife and daughter with establishing his signature style: the black leather jacket.
Persons: Jensen Huang, Lori Huang, Huang, she'd, he'd, Lori Mills, Spencer, Ryan Patel, Patel Organizations: Oregon State University, Hong Kong University of Science, Technology, OSU College of Engineering's, Nvidia, OSU, Stanford University, New York Times Locations: Madison, Denny's
Bombas' early Black Friday deals start now and the brand is offering 20% off sitewide through Thanksgiving. If you need one more reason to stock up during Bombas' Black Friday deals, consider that for every pair of socks and underwear purchased, Bombas will donate a pair to the homeless community. Top Black Friday Bombas deals Our favorite ankle socks for women, the Tri-Block Ankle Socks, are 20% offThe thick and scrunchy Chunky Ragg Half Calf Socks are 20% offGet high-quality workout underwear like the No Show Hipster for 20% offThe warm and cozy Gripper Slipper is 20% offThe best Black Friday Bombas deals for womenBombas Tri-Block Ankle Socks $10.40 $13.00 Save 20% These ankle socks are great if you wear sneakers everyday. View at BombasBombas Women's Gripper Slipper $38.40 $48.00 Save 20% The Bombas Gripper Slipper feels like wearing something halfway between a slipper and a sock, and the new redesign features double the cushioning. You can shop Bombas' early Black Friday sale between Saturday, Nov. 23 and Thursday, Nov. 28.
Persons: Bombas, Women's, , Kaplan, Mary Janes, Gabrielle Chase, Bombas Men's Organizations: Business, Bombas
We've reviewed Allbirds extensively, from the Tree Runners to the Couriers to the brand's SuperLight sneak, and our universal consensus is that they're worth the hype. Allbirds Men's Tree Runners $68.00 $98.00 Save 31% Allbirds Men's Tree Runner sneakers are crazy comfortable with a flattering and close-fitting silhouette and have a smooth but texturized upper. View at AllbirdsAllbirds Women's Tree Runners $68.00 $98.00 Save 31% Allbirds Women's Tree Runner sneakers are crazy comfortable with a flattering and close-fitting silhouette and have a smooth but texturized upper. View at AllbirdsBlack Friday clothing deals quick links: Best Black Friday clothing dealsAllbirds Black Friday sale FAQsWhen does the sale start and end? Allbird's Black Friday sale runs now through November 24.
Persons: We've, Allbirds, Organizations: Business, Black, Wool, Allbirds, Tree
The software company behind Starbucks' payment and scheduling system has been experiencing a dayslong ransomware attack, causing outages that are disrupting employee pay. The attack on Blue Yonder, the company that makes the software, began on November 21 and has caused outages in Starbucks's system for tracking employee hours and payments. Starbucks told its employees that payment for the period ending on November 17 would be unaffected, but there may be discrepancies in the following pay period. The outage has forced employees to track their shifts using pens and paper, according to Bloomberg. The software company does not currently have a timeline for resolution of the issue, according to a webpage the company has published for customers impacted by the attack.
Organizations: Starbucks, Business Insider, Bloomberg, BI, Business, CNN, Sony Locations: America
AdvertisementInterest rate cuts and stable GDP growth boost market optimism for 2025. But AI-driven stock market gains may not sustain, with S&P 500 returns possibly muted. Goldman Sachs advises diversifying investments, focusing on value stocks and foreign markets. An earlier note from Goldman Sachs projected that the S&P 500 could have muted returns at 3% annually for the next decade. AdvertisementFinally, consider growth stocks that aren't pegged to technology, such as Eli Lilly, Honeywell International, Vertex Pharmaceuticals, and Chipotle, among others.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Donald Trump's, it's, Peter Oppenheimer, Goldman, Eli Lilly Organizations: Honeywell, Vertex Pharmaceuticals, American Locations: Japan, Europe
As EV sales slowed this year, major automakers had to reckon with their lofty goals and adjust for shifting customer bases. Toyota, which was once criticized for its slow adoption of EV technology, is now enjoying big increases in hybrid sales. That is elevating the brand's cache among green-car shoppers in general, with Toyota often at the top of brand considerations for EV shoppers today. The company has said that Ford's hybrid cars are converting more car buyers than any other segment. AdvertisementFord also announced plans in August to replace two electric three-row SUVs with hybrid models.
Persons: they're, Ford, Kelley, Donald Trump, Trump, Biden, Elon Musk, Trump's Organizations: EV, Automotive, Companies, Tesla, Toyota, Ford, JD Power, GM, North, P Global Mobility Locations: North American
AdvertisementRussia could hand China technology that would cut into US undersea dominance, a US admiral said. At a security forum, he said exchanges among Russia, Iran, North Korea, and China have intensified. Adm. Samuel Paparo, the US Navy's top commander in the Indo-Pacific, said that Russia will likely give submarine technology to China that would undercut the US' undersea dominance. According to Paparo, Russia is not only exchanging military capability and technology with China but also with North Korea and Iran. In return, according to Paparo, Russia would likely provide missile and submarine technology to the North Korean state.
Persons: Adm, Samuel Paparo, Paparo, Kurt Campbell, Kim Jong Un, Vladimir Putin Organizations: Halifax Security Forum, US Navy, North Locations: Russia, China, North Korea, Iran, Halifax, People's Republic of China, Taiwan, South China, Philippines, Japan, South Korea, Paparo, Korea, Ukraine, Korean, Russian, Pyongyang, Moscow
Chipmaker Intel and the CHIPS Act Office are close to finalizing a deal which would award the company a roughly $8 billion grant, according to a person familiar with the matter, as the Biden administration moves to dole out funds before President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration. The U.S. awarded Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. a $6.6 billion grant earlier this month, raising investor expectations that cash funding for Intel would come soon. Intel has benefited from CHIPS Act tax breaks but has not yet received cash awards, something which Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger has expressed dissatisfaction with. "We're frustrated that hasn't moved faster," Gelsinger told CNBC in October, referring to the CHIPS Act grants. U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson had previously said he might look to repeal the bipartisan CHIPS Act, but he then walked back those comments.
Persons: Biden, Donald Trump's, Intel's, Pat Gelsinger, hasn't, Gelsinger, They've, Mike Johnson, acquirers Organizations: Intel, Commerce Department, Department of Defense, Street Journal, The New York Times, U.S, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, CNBC, Qualcomm Locations: Intel's
Some of the nation’s leading civil rights groups told NBC News that they are gearing up for a flood of legal battles to protect the protesters. Under Rubinstein, America First Legal has in the past year filed four lawsuits that provide a glimpse into how the Trump administration could differ from its predecessor. America First Legal alleges in the suits that the State Department, the Justice Department, the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Education have protected pro-Hamas extremists. Rubinstein in an interview brought up an additional law he expects a second Trump administration could enforce. The Knight Institute said although it expects the new Trump administration to aggressively police speech, it is prepared to fight back.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, they’re, Biden, he’s, , Ben Wizner, Sen, Joni Ernst, Ernst, CUAD, ” Ernst, Elisha Baker, Reed Rubinstein, Stephen Miller, Miller, Rubinstein, , ” Rubinstein, aren’t, Department didn’t, Spokespeople, SJP, Edward Ahmed Mitchell, Mitchell, Joe Biden, ” Mitchell, Vince Warren, Esther, , ” Warren, Knight, Jameel Jaffer, Wizner, isn’t, ” Wizner, Kenneth Marcus, George W, Bush, Louis D, Marcus, Marcus ’, ” Marcus, Trump’s, ” Trump Organizations: Republicans, Trump, NBC, Hamas, U.S . Justice Department, U.S, NBC News, American Civil, Technology, ’ Biden, Justice Department, . Immigration, Customs Enforcement, , FBI, Columbia University, Columbia University Apartheid, Flyers, U.S . Education Department, America, Washington , D.C, State Department, Department of Homeland Security, Department of Education, Department, Foreign, Education Department, Chicago, Department of Justice, Chicago Police Department, Center for Constitutional Rights, ACLU, Islamic Relations, Muslim, , Republican, Trump Justice Department, Heritage Foundation, Knight, Biden Treasury Department, of Education’s, Civil Rights, Brandeis Center for Human, of Education, The, Education, Republican Party, Jewish Locations: Gaza, Washington, U.S, , Iowa, Washington ,, FARA, Chicago, Israel, Vietnam, York
AdvertisementAI leaders are rethinking data-heavy training for large language models. Traditional models scale linearly with data, but this approach may hit a dead end. Now, AI leaders are rethinking the conventional wisdom about how to train large language models. The focus on training data arises from research showing that transformers, the neural networks behind large language models, have a one-to-one relationship with the amount of data they're given. The money going into AI has largely hung on the idea that this scaling law "would hold," Scale AI CEO Alexandr Wang said at the Cerebral Valley conference this week, tech newsletter Command Line reported.
Persons: Alex Voica, Mohamed, Alexandr Wang, It's, Aidan Gomez, Gomez, Richard Socher, we're, Kevin Scott, Waleed Kadous, Uber Organizations: Meta, Google, University of Artificial Intelligence, Command, Microsoft, Sequoia Capital's, OpenAI's o1, o1 Locations: University, ChatGPT, gpt
Starbucks' airport location staff — and company technology — will be put to the test this week during some of the busiest travel days of the year. For the aviation industry, bottlenecks at airport Starbucks are just another sign of soaring demand and overcrowded airports. Licensing modelA challenge for Starbucks is that licensees — not Starbucks itself – operate its airport locations. Starbucks opened its first airport location with licensee HMSHost in 1991 at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, which serves Starbucks' hometown. While HMSHost still operates the overwhelming majority of Starbucks' airport cafes, more operators, such as Paradies Lagardere and OTG, have since taken a swing at it.
Persons: Jeff Greenberg, Coresa Barrino, Brian Niccol, Niccol, Jennifer Simkins, Ursula Cassinerio, HMSHost, Paradies, OTG, Mark Kalinowski, Leslie Josephs, Kevin Schimpf, Sara Senatore ., Senatore Organizations: Miami International Airport, Universal, Getty, Starbucks, New, Transportation Security Administration, U.S . Department of Transportation, Aviation Administration, Dallas Fort Worth International, International, Airlines, Tacoma International Airport, HMSHost, Equity Research, LaGuardia, CNBC, Bank of America Locations: Miami, Charlotte , North Carolina, Charlotte, Chipotle, U.S, Seattle, New York City
In a sense, AI can give each of us a job promotion, not be a job replacement. : With Gen AI, scientists can slash the time required for drug discovery, accelerate therapy development, and find vaccines that are cheaper and more accessible. Media : By automating the difficult art and production aspects of games and entertainment, Gen AI frees designers to create and ideate more. : By automating the difficult art and production aspects of games and entertainment, Gen AI frees designers to create and ideate more. Financial Services: Gen AI can strengthen fraud detection and compliance while increasing the efficiency of loan officers making lending decisions.
Persons: Sivasubramaniani, , Marie Kondo, Thoughtfully, strategize —, Swami Sivasubramanian, Jane Zhang Organizations: Amazon Web Services, Design, Engineers, Financial Services
AdvertisementLinkedIn cofounder Reid Hoffman hopes a second Trump term can usher in an era of AI innovation. Hoffman warned that Elon Musk shouldn't use his relationship with Donald Trump to boost xAI. LinkedIn cofounder Reid Hoffman said Elon Musk has a "serious conflict of interest" when it comes to guiding a second Trump administration on AI policies in the US. Hours after the FT published the op-ed, Musk responded to an X post unrelated to Hoffman's column, criticizing people who post on LinkedIn. AdvertisementHoffman, who is also the cofounder of Inflection AI, shared his hopes and concerns for Trump's second term in the FT op-ed.
Persons: Reid Hoffman, Hoffman, Elon, Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Musk, Trump, Kamala Harris Organizations: Trump, Financial Times, LinkedIn, Biden Administration, Trump White, PayPal, Confinity, Republican Party, of Government Locations: America
AI is also ushering in an era of nuclear power, however, which is cleaner. Tech companies are investing in nuclear power plants to fuel AI data centers. Some industry leaders believe that nuclear energy might be the only reliable way to meet the demands of the AI revolution. "AI requires massive, industrial-scale amounts of energy," Franklin Servan-Schreiber, the CEO of nuclear energy startup Transmutex, previously told Business Insider. According to the Financial Times, last week, at the UN COP29 climate summit in Baku, Azerbaijan, Big Tech companies flew under the radar more than usual.
Persons: Fabrice, Franklin Servan, Schreiber, Edwin Lyman, Toby Rice, EQT, Rice, Kevin Thompson, Jensen Huang Organizations: Tech, US Energy Information Administration, Companies, Google, Union of, Scientists, Wall Street, Financial Times, UN, Big Tech, McKinsey, Nvidia, Hong Kong University of Science, Technology Locations: United States, Washington ,, Baku, Azerbaijan
Just seven stocks have fueled much of the market's rally: Amazon, Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta, Nvidia, and Tesla. Move over, Magnificent SevenAfter an incredible two-year rally, it's may be difficult to see the Magnificent Seven cooling off. For context, the Magnificent Seven outperformed the rest of the S&P 500 by 22% so far this year and 63% in 2023. "And so our analysis is there's potential for multiple expansion in those stocks," Kostin added. To find companies likely to see enhanced revenues from AI, Goldman Sachs analyzed recent messaging from company management regarding AI rollout.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Tesla, David Kostin, Kostin, That's, Goldman Organizations: Microsoft, Meta, Nvidia, Digital Realty
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