Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Darden Graduate School of Business: Worried About Artificial Intelligence? You Aren't Alone

By SIMON CONSTABLE 

When ChatGPT launched two years ago, it threw generative artificial intelligence (AI) into the media limelight. While many in business saw the opportunities for increased efficiency, others expressed serious concerns at both extremes.

Most Americans worry that AI will take their jobs. A recent poll by Gallup revealed that nearly seven out of 10 people believe this will happen over the long term. However, what’s less well known is that the people in the business of using AI are also worried. The problem they see is multifaceted but ultimately boils down to one thing: Trust. Read more here.



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Barron's: NATO Is Taking Up Arms. These ETFs Stand to Gain.

By SIMON CONSTABLE

The West, along with its allies, is now growing its armories with munitions, tanks, and other war materiel. After decades of complacency from some countries, the spending surge could continue for the foreseeable future, experts say.

“The war continues to rage in Ukraine and is a serious concern,” says Seth Jones, president of the Center for Strategic & International Studies’ Defense and Security Department. “There will be a push for increased defense spending.” Read more here

F-35 Training Excercise
Staff Sergeant Alexander Cook, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons


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Monday, December 9, 2024

FOX Business: Trump's France visit comes amid tariff threats and a country in economic turmoil

 By SIMON CONSTABLE

FRANCE – President-elect Trump's visit to France on Saturday for the re-opening of the Notre Dame cathedral in Paris might give people a moment to forget the present economic doldrums facing the country.

Indeed, France’s prime minister, Michel Barnier, stepped down on Wednesday, just 90 days after taking the job last September. It marks the shortest tenure in the republic since 1958.

Now the country has no fiscal budget for next year, no government, but it does have a lot of anxiety about what happens next politically and economically. And the law prevents another general election before next July. Read more here.

Dan Scavino Jr., Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons





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Saturday, December 7, 2024

WSJ: FINANCIAL FLASHBACK 30 YEARS AGO: The ‘Tequila Crisis’ in Currency Markets

 By SIMON CONSTABLE

In December 1994, what Wall Street called the Tequila Crisis—named after the country’s national drink—startled international investors as the Mexican peso fell sharply and then some more. 

Part of the upheaval was blamed on an armed conflict that broke out in January between Mayan Indians and Mexico. A cease-fire was reached, but in December, rebels threatened to break it.

At the same time, investors increasingly favored other emerging markets and redirected capital away from Mexico.

As a result, the peso’s value initially plunged close to its government-mandated lower limit. Mexico’s central bank tried to steady the peso with higher interest rates. But it didn’t last, and the government cut peso’s value further. 

Mexico had been “one of the bright lights of the world’s new panoply of emerging markets,” made more so by new trade pacts such as the North American Free Trade Agreement, The Wall Street Journal reported on Page One. But investors’ confidence was damaged by the sudden devaluation.

In January 1995, the month after the peso crisis flared, the International Monetary Fund, the U.S. and others announced a $50 billion package of rescue loans for Mexico.  Read more here.

Image credit: The Wall Street Journal, Dec. 22, 1994


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CC: Hezbollah's Plans to Invade North Israel Revealed

 By SIMON CONSTABLE

Listen here.



Distinguished journalist Ben Weinthal joins us today to talk about how Hezbollah plans to invade North Israel got revealed. Plus the mood in the middle east ahead of the holiday season and Trump inauguration.



Fox News: Exclusive: A look at Hezbollah's plan to terrorize and invade northern Israel by Ben Weinthal

https://www.foxnews.com/world/exclusive-look-hezbollahs-plan-terrorize-invade-northern-israel




  • Picture of artillery firing from 1982 courtesy of / IDF Spokesperson's Unit via Wikimedia
  • NASA liftoff audio courtesy of NASA launch comentary from NASA via Wikimedia Commons: This file is in the public domain in the United States because it was solely created by NASA. NASA copyright policy states that "NASA material is not protected by copyright unless noted".
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Friday, December 6, 2024

Korn Ferry: Britain’s Growing Phone-Call Phobia

By SIMON CONSTABLE 

The call, it seems, isn’t being answered—not if it’s on a younger worker's phone, at least.

In a trend that has become firmly global, a recent survey showed that fewer than one in four UK residents in the 18-to-34 age bracket ever pick up a voice or audio call—particularly if they don’t recognize or aren’t expecting it. Up to 70% of the cohort prefer texting to a phone call, the same report states. “For this generation, to text is the same as speaking to someone,” says Sonamara Jeffreys, Korn Ferry’s president for EMEA. Read more here.




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Thursday, December 5, 2024

#TOULOUSE: WSJ Quiz re cyber fraud scams. @RealConstable @BatchelorShow @WSJ Occitanie

 By SIMON CONSTABLE

Listen here.

PMRMaeyaertCC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons


WSJ: Who Are the Victims of Cyberfraud? Take Our Quiz and Find Out HERE.


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