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They’re really just like us. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said Monday that programming artificial intelligence models has reached the point where it’s not wildly unlike programming a human being. “The way you program a computer today, to ask the computer to do something for you, even write a program, generate images, write a poem, just ask it nicely,” he told London Tech Week. “And the thing that’s really, really quite amazing is the way you program an AI is like the way you program a person.”

Start by flattering your AI, laying it on thick, he helpfully explained: “You say, ‘You’re an incredible poet. You’re deeply steeped in Shakespeare. And I would like you to write a poem to describe today’s keynote.’ And, without very much effort, this AI would help you generate such a wonderful poem.” So sure, ask that of an AI, and no doubt you will get your poem, but ask a random person and, befuddled, they may well quote Shakespeare back at you: “I do desire we may be better strangers.”

International Economics

Washington Trade Talks With Beijing Drive S&P 500 Toward Record High

Photo via Li Ying / Xinhua News Agency/Newscom

When the entire world economic order rests on the progress of your work meeting, it’s definitely wise to order in. US and Chinese negotiators — decamped to London to hash out their nations’ differences over trade — opted for delivery from one of the British capital’s best Middle Eastern restaurants, Ottolenghi, during an extensive round of talks Monday. It sounds like the hummus went over well.

Envoys from the world’s two major economic powers worked through dinner, and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called the day’s six-hour talks a “good meeting” while Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick hailed them as “fruitful.” Buoyed by negotiators from the two sides breaking (one assumes pita) bread together, the S&P 500 approached its February high.

Playing Nice for a Change

The on-off dynamic of the US-China economic relationship so far this year would make the writing rooms of most soap operas blush. President Donald Trump started by increasing tariffs on the world’s second-largest economy, culminating with a 145% tariff on Chinese imports in early April, which prompted China to retaliate with a 125% tariff on US goods in response. In the wake of Trump’s “Liberation Day” levy announcement, the World Trade Organization’s chief economist warned that global trade would fall 0.2% in 2025, ending up 3% below where it would have been without a trade war.

Days after the announcement, the S&P plummeted to as much as 19% below its record high of 6,144.15, set on February 19. Markets steadily recovered and banks, which had slashed year-end projections, grew more optimistic. But both sides dug in for leverage in advance of talks: Washington banned the use of advanced Chinese-made microchips and put new restrictions on selling some chip design and jet engine technologies to China. Beijing restricted the export of critical rare earths — which it produces about 90% of — leaving the supply chains of automakers, semiconductor manufacturers, defense firms, and aerospace manufacturers in jeopardy. For markets, Monday yielded a day free of that drama, pointing toward calm:

  • Kevin Hassett, the head of the White House’s National Economic Council, told CNBC that after a “handshake” between negotiators in London on a deal between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, the administration expects that “any export controls from the US will be eased and the rare earths will be released in volume” from the Chinese side. The S&P 500 rose a cautious 0.09% and closed at its highest since February 21, just over 2% away from a new record high.
  • China issued its latest trade figures, showing ample cause for it to make a deal: Export growth slowed to 4.8% year over year in May, down more than three percentage points from April’s 8.1% expansion. More dramatically, rare earth exports fell 48.3% year over year to $18.7 million in May, according to General Administration of Customs data.

Pump the Gas: Hassett clarified that the highly sophisticated US AI chips, like those made by Nvidia, will remain off the table as concessions, but there were signs of early horsetrading in the days leading up to Monday’s talks, suggesting that won’t be a roadblock. China’s Ministry of Commerce announced on Saturday that it greenlit several applications for rare earth exports and would entertain negotiations for more. Beijing also granted temporary export licenses for rare earths to Detroit’s Big Three carmakers — GM, Ford and Stellantis — sparing the US from a panic that has threatened to shut down some European auto plants.

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Big Tech

Apple Still Won’t Ride the AI Hype Train

For a Big Tech firm, Apple is suddenly thinking small. At least when it comes to artificial intelligence.

On Monday, the consumer hardware giant kicked off its annual Worldwide Developers Conference with what felt like typical reveals for the company, including updates to its iOS, iPadOS and MacOS platforms. And, in what’s beginning to feel similarly familiar for the often cutting-edge tech firm, Apple once again refused to go all-in on the AI hype train, noting some incremental updates to its current offerings and highlighting its “local is better” approach to AI. Which begs the question: Just how skeptical is Apple of the AI revolution?

Within Reason

The biggest AI announcement on Monday was likely the opening of the company’s Foundation Models, which would allow app developers to tap into the AI models built directly into the hardware of Apple’s devices. Running AI on-device typically means using models that are less capable and trained on smaller datasets than those that require tapping the massive power of cloud computing farms. Apple touts the local model as being more efficient and more secure than bigger models while allowing users to access AI-powered apps and tools even without an internet connection. For developers, it’s a little like getting access to a motorcycle with a speed regulator. “We don’t really know what the quality is going to be,” Roman Khaves, CEO of AI-powered dating advice app RIZZ, told The Wall Street Journal. “The expectation is not that high.”

The skepticism may be fitting — it seems to be almost exactly how Apple feels about the potential of AI in general. At least, that’s what a team of researchers indicated in a white paper published on the company’s website last week, titled “The Illusion of Thinking: Understanding the Strengths and Limitations of Reasoning Models via the Lens of Problem Complexity”:

  • In the report, researchers outlined how they tested certain leading Large Reasoning Models (LRMs, supposedly a step beyond Large Language Models) made by OpenAI, Claude, and DeepSeek against classic puzzles and tests (such as the Tower of Hanoi game, which early AI systems solved in 1957).
  • In sum, they found that the LRMs “still fail to develop generalizable problem-solving capabilities, with accuracy ultimately collapsing to zero beyond certain complexities across different environments.” To laypeople: That basically means that even the AI models that are supposed to be good at thinking are still mostly just good at predictive text, a la chatbots — consider it a hedge against the imminent arrival of super-genius problem-solving Artificial General Intelligence.

All In: Meta, on the other hand, keeps betting big on AI. On Sunday, Bloomberg reported that Zuckerberg’s empire is in talks to invest $10 billion or more into Scale AI, a data-labeling startup that helps clients accelerate the development of AI programs. The company’s client list includes General Motors and Uber, and it has increasingly worked as a defense contractor for the US government.

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Media & Entertainment

Warner Bros. Discovery Formalizes Break-Up Plans

In most break-ups, the questions are, “Who gets the dog, the air fryer, or the Sonos Sound Bar?” In this one, they’re “Who gets The Sopranos, the American League Wild Card Game and, most importantly, the roughly $38 billion of corporate debt?”

On Monday, Warner Bros. Discovery — roughly three years after its corporate marriage — announced the terms of its long-discussed separation, which will create a separate entity that will take on much of the media giant’s cable TV portfolio.

Conscious Uncoupling

Like the rest of its pre-streaming Hollywood peers, Warner Bros. Discovery finds itself trapped between two eras. On one side, a declining cable empire that, despite existential fears, still generates pretty good cash flow. On the other side, an emergent streaming business that could be a nimble new media enterprise, were it not bogged down by years and years of debt acquired as the legacy media empire transitioned into the future.

And, much like Comcast, WBD has decided the best way forward is to split into two separate, independently operated, publicly traded companies. So what will the two new parts of the empire look like?

  • One is the likely-to-be-renamed Streaming & Studios company, which will be led by current WBD CEO David Zaslav. The company will consist of exactly what it sounds like: streamer HBO Max and its 122 million global subscribers, the Warner Bros. film studio, cable crown jewel HBO, and the international versions of TNT Sports, among other bits and pieces.
  • The other will be the also likely-to-be-renamed Global Networks company, to be led by WBD CFO Gunnar Wiedenfels. That company will take control of WBD’s various cable brands, including CNN, the US version of TNT Sports, TBS, HGTV and Cartoon Network — and, most importantly, a “majority” of WBD’s debt load.

Debt Bet: That debt won’t be entirely Global Network’s burden; the unit will retain as much as a 20% stake in the Streaming & Studios business, which will help with payments. For reference, in WBD’s first-quarter earnings report, the company said its cable-centric “Global Linear Brands” unit generated nearly $1.8 billion in adjusted EBITDA, compared with its “Streaming & Studios” unit’s $540 million.

Extra Upside

  • Sigh of Relief? Only 28% of CEOs expect a recession in the next six months, down from 46% in May and 62% in April, according to Chief Executive’s latest CEO Confidence Index survey.
  • Joining the 1%: Japan’s Metaplanet, a one-time struggling budget hotel company turned crypto firm, intends to raise $5.4 billion to buy up bitcoin and give it control of 1% of the world supply.
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