đ Staying put

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Hereâs what you need to know
Yuan small step. Chinaâs central bank cut interest rates to bolster its economy amid continuing trade tensions and global market volatility.
Quantum leaps and bounds. Cisco just introduced a chip that marks the companyâs entry into the quantum computing race and signals a potential long-term strategic shift.
Driving costs up. Ford just announced a $2,000 price increase on some of its select Mexico-made models, attributing the hike to continuing auto industry tariff pressures.
Heavy losses. Weight Watchers canât take advantage of the weight-loss boom. It just filed for bankruptcy despite pivots by the company to focus on prescribing GLP-1 drugs.
The GENIUS bar. Corruption concerns over a Trump-backed cryptocurrency company and a stablecoin deal have jeopardized the future of the bipartisan GENIUS Act.
Bibbidi bobbidi boom. Disney continues to have the magic touch. Its quarterly earnings report showed growth among all its major departments, sending the stock way up.
A whole new yield. The House of Mouse announced a seventh global theme park, this time in Abu Dhabi. And for this park, Disney wonât even have to foot the bill.
Airmageddon. The chaos at Newark Airport is continuing. Now, elected officials want a federal investigation, emergency funding, and more controllers sent to help.
Holding pattern
The Federal Reserve stood pat on interest rates Wednesday, continuing to hold the benchmark range steady at 4.25â4.5%, sticking to a cautious stance as it juggles sticky inflation and a cooling U.S. economy. But this wasnât business as usual â Fed Chair Jerome Powell warned of rising risks in regard to both inflation and unemployment, and he gestured toward the possibility of stagflation.
Powell said the U.S. economy is in âsolid shapeâ but admitted that his gut says âuncertainty about the path of the economy is extremely elevated.â Thatâs largely because of tariffs.
President Donald Trumpâs sweeping tariffs â including a massive 145% duty on Chinese imports â arenât officially factored into the Fedâs decisions, but Powell acknowledged their potential to complicate the inflation picture. If those price shocks prove temporary, the Fed may hold course. But if they stick? WellâŠ
The Fed will âwait and see and watchâ as the tariffs change things over the coming weeks and months. But with growth slowing, inflation lingering, and tariffs looming, waiting might not get easier.
Powell remains focused on inflation and employment, not the presidentâs social media tirades directed at him. But the Fed chairâs path forward looks anything but easy. Quartzâs Shannon Carroll has more on how tariffs could force the Fedâs hand.
Siri, not sorry
Apple may be Googleâs biggest customer â and, increasingly, its biggest threat.
During testimony on Wednesday in the DOJâs antitrust trial against Alphabet, Appleâs senior vice president of services, Eddy Cue, revealed that the company is exploring how to fold AI-powered search into its browser, Safari. That news sent Alphabetâs stock tumbling 8%, and for good reason: Now, an era where Google remains the default search engine is far from guaranteed.
Apple is already in talks with startup Perplexity, and Cue said that company, OpenAIâs ChatGPT, and Anthropicâs Claude could be part of a future where users select their AI engine of choice for searches. Cue said those tools arenât perfect yet, but theyâre already good enough that âpeople will switch.â
Meanwhile, Apple still collects upward of $20 billion a year from Alphabet for making Google the default search engine on its iPhones â a deal thatâs partially at the heart of the federal governmentâs antitrust case.
Cue didnât suggest that Appleâs potential AI-powered search engines would dethrone Google as the default any time soon. But Apple, quietly, might be building a future where users â and not Google â get to decide how they search. Quartzâs Niamh Rowe has more on how Apple could reshape Googleâs bread and butter.
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