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Google announced Tuesday that people who play mobile games on Android can tap its Gemini AI assistant as a coach and trainer. A new integration, which will roll out in the next few months, will see a “helpful in-game overlay” appear over certain games downloaded from the search giant’s Play Store.

The feature mirrors a similar integration by Microsoft, which has been adding its chatbot CoPilot as a “gaming companion” for Xbox mobile and Windows 11 users. With both Google and Microsoft, the AI can assist users by offering tips or guidance for progressing in a game. Students already get chatbots to do their homework, so why not have them take on Ant King in Solo Leveling: ARISE, too?

Economics

Is Powell Snubbing Interest in 2nd Fed Rate Cut?

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell takes questions at a September 2025 press conference.
Photo by Federal Reserve Board via Public Domain Mark 1.0

The rate cut that investors fretted would never come finally arrived last week, which, of course, means it’s time for … fretting about the next cut.

US markets fell on Tuesday, putting a pin in a record-setting run, after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell gave off a hawkish vibe, insisting the central bank will move cautiously on additional cuts and suggesting that equities are overpriced.

Proceed With Caution

In a speech in Rhode Island, Powell delivered no revelations, but rather a reminder. The Fed remains in a “challenging situation,” caught between managing inflation (which has been above the central bank’s 2% target rate since 2021) and the labor market (which has softened appreciably in recent months).

Even with investors betting there is a 91.9% chance the Fed’s policymaking board lowers rates by at least a quarter-point on Oct. 29, according to the CME FedWatch, Powell’s message was clear: Nothing’s written in permanent ink. “If we ease too aggressively, we could leave the inflation job unfinished and need to reverse course later to fully restore 2% inflation,” the level the Fed has long viewed as stable economic growth, he said. During a Q&A after his remarks, Powell also reiterated another factor that many prominent observers have said for months or longer could eventually catch up with investors, that “equity prices are fairly highly valued.” Central to those concerns is the strength of the AI boom, which has powered this year’s market rally. It was rattled on Tuesday:

  • The S&P 500 fell 0.5%, after reaching an intraday high before Powell’s remarks. The tech-heavy Nasdaq fell 1%, with several AI power players down (Nvidia fell 2.8%, Oracle 4.3%, Amazon 3% and Meta 1.3%).
  • On Monday, Nvidia pledged to invest up to $100 billion in OpenAI, while OpenAI promised to buy chips from Nvidia. Yes, that’s circular, for those of you keeping score at home. Bespoke Investment Group analysts wrote in a note on Tuesday: “OpenAI is now selling itself off to a supplier in order to fund its investments. Phrased differently, [Nvidia] is purchasing a stake in a customer in order to assure future revenue. You don’t have to be a skeptic about AI technology’s promise in general to see this announcement as a troubling signal about how self-referential the entire space has become.”

Get Used to It: The S&P 500 is trading at the highest against future earnings since the 2021 post-COVID boom. The most aggressive bears, like Universa’s Mark Spitznagel, forecast a crash. Powell said Monday, for the Fed’s part, officials will “balance both sides of our dual mandate,” suggesting interest-rate cuts will come if growth is at risk. Vanguard analysts wrote last week that the “real” long-term consideration for investors is “how they adapt to a world where structurally higher rates — and the forces behind them — are likely here to stay.”

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Industrials

Boeing Sees Clearing Skies Ahead as Jetliner Sales Soar

Here’s something Boeing hasn’t experienced in a long, long time: cruising altitude.

Fresh off a humongous sale to Uzbekistan Airways, US diplomats engaged in trade negotiations with China said on Tuesday that the aerospace giant is on the verge of a “huge” sale to the Middle Kingdom.

The Seatbelt Light is Off

The Uzbekistan sale, announced by the White House on Monday, is nothing to sniff at. Under the more than $8 billion deal, Uzbekistan Airways will purchase 14 of Boeing’s wide-body 787-9 Dreamliner jets with options to buy up to eight more. The White House boasts the order will support 35,000 Boeing jobs. It’s the latest sign that Boeing has put its nightmarish rough patch behind it.

In fact, Boeing has been soaring through somewhat smoother skies ever since the calendar turned over to 2025, though you did still need to remain seated with your seatbelts fastened from time to time:

  • Earlier this month, Boeing announced that it had delivered 57 jets in August, an increase from 48 deliveries in July, marking the strongest August for the company since 2018. That put the company’s total deliveries so far this year at 385 through August, eclipsing the 348 planes it delivered through all of 2024.
  • Meanwhile, the company said it has received 725 gross orders in the year through August, against 46 cancellations or conversions. That places its entire backlog at 5,994 aircraft.

Around The World: That backlog may soon get even bigger. According to US Ambassador to China David Perdue, the company is on the verge of a “huge” sale to China, ending a sales drought in the country since 2017. While Perdue didn’t offer details, Bloomberg reported in August that Boeing was in talks to sell as many as 500 aircraft to China as it seeks to double its commercial aircraft fleet to 9,755 in the next two decades. Sounds huge indeed. It’d be the continuation of a trend for the administration, which has helped Boeing secure sales in Qatar and Indonesia so far this year, with a deal to sell Boeing planes to Turkey potentially being hammered out later this week. It’s the kind of door-opening that Boeing can live with.

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Energy

What’s the Meme-ing of Plug Power’s Winning Streak?

When “hydrogen” and “explode” appear in the same sentence, it usually spells disaster. This time, it spells breakthrough.

Shares of Plug Power, a hydrogen tech provider, have exploded in the past week, climbing roughly 50% through the past five trading sessions (though its 10-day streak finally snapped on Tuesday). Given the company’s not-so-impressive history, what’s with the runup?

What Do You Meme?

When we say not-so-impressive, we’re actually being kind. Case in point: Plug Power has not reported an annual profit since Y2K. Last year, it posted a $2.4 billion loss. This year, it’s on track to improve, if ever so slightly, that shortfall to a $677 million loss, according to FactSet data reported by Barron’s. Investors “see [hydrogen] technology having a role to play for data centers and power demand needs,” TD Securities analyst Jeff Osborne told MarketWatch, and are bullish on the sector as a result. On the other hand, Plug Power has announced new big clients since it began running with the bulls earlier this month, and its next earnings report isn’t until we’re knee-deep in Scorpio season.

That can only mean one thing. Or should we say, meme one thing:

  • Just as noteworthy as Plug Power’s rapid share price rise? The fact that roughly 40% of its shares available for trading have been sold short — that’s way above an average 3% short rate on companies in the S&P 500, according to FactSet, and makes it ripe for a so-called short-squeeze.
  • And indeed, chatter on the infamous meme stock forum r/WallStreetBets so far this week confirms that the stock has once again caught the eye of the day-trading meme community, with one poster claiming to have bought $29,000 worth of shares at $2.65 each.

Over the Hedge: Adding fuel to the meme stock fire: Hedge fund Heights Capital Management, which Plug Power disclosures on Monday revealed may soon resell 185 million Plug Power shares, worth some $305 million. That could explain some of the recent excitement, though, again, Plug Power has been rising for days. Still, the company is far from its glory days: In 2021, amid both meme stock and green tech mania, its shares peaked at $75. Once a meme stock, always a meme stock.

Extra Upside

  • Changing Tastes: Michelob Ultra has overtaken Modelo Especial as America’s best-selling beer.
  • Brekkie Brexit: Amazon is closing all 19 of its Amazon Fresh grocery stores in the UK, though it’s converting five into Whole Foods locations.
  • Currently, the S&P 500 Trades at 22x Earnings — dotcom-level valuations but with stronger fundamentals. Today’s companies have better margins, balance sheets, and growth than the 2000s tech bubble. Smart wealth management navigates these complexities. Learn more at Range.com.*

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