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DealBook, with founder Andrew Ross Sorkin

Highlights

  1. DealBook Newsletter

    Will Biden’s Trade War With China Get Results?

    The White House has imposed $18 billion in new duties on Chinese imports, but it’s unclear how much that will help his economic agenda.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinRavi MattuBernhard WarnerSarah KesslerMichael J. de la MercedLauren Hirsch and

    President Biden has added solar cells and electric vehicles to Washington’s trade war with Beijing.
    President Biden has added solar cells and electric vehicles to Washington’s trade war with Beijing.
    CreditBrian Snyder/Reuters
    1. DealBook Newsletter

      An Inflation Test Looms Over the Economy and the Election

      The pivotal Consumer Price Index report is set to be published on Wednesday as the window for interest-rate cuts before November is closing.

       By Andrew Ross SorkinRavi MattuBernhard WarnerSarah KesslerMichael J. de la MercedLauren Hirsch and

      Jay Powell, the Fed chair, and investors will be closely watching Wednesday’s Consumer Price Index report for signs on whether inflation is moving closer to its 2 percent target.
      Jay Powell, the Fed chair, and investors will be closely watching Wednesday’s Consumer Price Index report for signs on whether inflation is moving closer to its 2 percent target.
      CreditSaul Loeb/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
    2. DealBook Newsletter

      All the Rage in Private Equity: Mortgaging the Fund

      A little-known financial tool was the talk of the Milken Institute’s Global Conference.

       By Lauren HirschMichael J. de la MercedBernhard Warner and

      The annual Milken Institute Global Conference in Los Angeles this week.
      The annual Milken Institute Global Conference in Los Angeles this week.
      CreditFrederic J. Brown/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
    3. Sign Up for DealBook

      Make sense of the latest business and policy headlines with our daily newsletter.

       

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DealBook Newsletter

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  1. Why Companies Are Nervous About the Consumer

    On earnings calls, dozens of corporate executives have cited a slowdown in spending to explain why sales are slipping.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinRavi MattuBernhard WarnerSarah KesslerMichael J. de la MercedLauren Hirsch and

    McDonald’s is among a growing number of companies to warn Wall Street that consumers are beginning to reduce their spending.
    CreditMike Blake/Reuters
  2. A Plan to Break up Paramount

    If Sony and Apollo Global win the fight to buy the media company, they plan to keep the studio business and sell everything else.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinRavi MattuBernhard WarnerSarah KesslerMichael J. de la MercedLauren HirschEphrat LivniBenjamin Mullin and

    Paramount bidders have a plan to break up the media giant.
    CreditAlex Welsh for The New York Times
  3. TikTok’s Legal Bet on the First Amendment

    The popular video-sharing app faces uncertain odds as it takes its fight to court to turn back a potential ban in the United States.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinRavi MattuBernhard WarnerSarah KesslerMichael J. de la MercedLauren Hirsch and

    Legal experts say that TikTok has a chance of winning its legal challenge to a law that could force it to stop operating in the U.S.
    CreditCraig Hudson/Reuters
  4. The Big Questions Hanging Over a Blackstone Fund

    Wall Street has been debating how the investment giant’s $59 billion real estate fund has managed to outperform virtually all its rivals.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinRavi MattuBernhard WarnerSarah KesslerMichael J. de la MercedLauren Hirsch and

    Wall Street has been awash with whispers about how Blackstone’s blockbuster real estate fund values its assets.
    CreditJeenah Moon/Reuters
  5. How Bad Is A.I. for the Climate?

    Tech giants are building power-hungry data centers to run their artificial intelligence tools. The costs of that demand surge are becoming clearer.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinRavi MattuBernhard WarnerSarah KesslerMichael J. de la MercedLauren Hirsch and

    A.I. requires large data centers and a lot of power. That risks throwing companies’ climate pledges off track.
    CreditNathan Howard for The New York Times

DealBook Summit

More in DealBook Summit ›
  1. Elon Musk’s Mindset: ‘It’s a Weakness to Want to Be Liked’

    In an interview, the tech billionaire slams advertisers for pulling back from X and discusses his emotional state.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinEvan RobertsElaine ChenDan Powell and

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  2. Kamala Harris on Polling and Polarization

    In an interview, the vice president discusses the extent to which she follows polls and why social division is like a virus.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinEvan RobertsElaine ChenDan Powell and

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  3. Jamie Dimon on Why He Thinks We Are Living in One of the Most Dangerous Times

    The JP Morgan chief on E.S.G., the dire state of the global economy and Elon Musk.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinEvan RobertsElaine ChenDan Powell and

    Credit
  4. Bob Iger of Disney on Culture Wars and Streaming

    The chief executive talks about returning to the company’s roots while adapting to changing times.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinEvan RobertsElaine ChenDan Powell and

    Credit
  5. How Andrew Ross Sorkin Gets Business and World Leaders to Open Up

    The many sides of Elon Musk, the challenges of political interviews, warming up guests beforehand — we take you behind the scenes of the DealBook Summit.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinLulu Garcia-NavarroEvan RobertsElaine Chen and

    Andrew Ross Sorkin with vice president Kamala Harris during the DealBook Summit at Lincoln Center in New York City.
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DealBook: A Special Section

More in DealBook: A Special Section ›
  1. At the DealBook Summit, Leaders Contend With an ‘Existential Moment’

    Even leaders who usually display unrestrained confidence expressed anxiety about the state of the world.

     By

    CreditIllustration by Israel Vargas. Photographs by Mario Anzuoni/Reuters, Kenny Holston/The New York Times, Drew Angerer/Getty Images, Jackie Molloy for The New York Times, Coley Brown for The New York Times, Philip Cheung for The New York Times, Alain Jocard/Agence France-Presse via Getty Images, Emily Berl for The New York Times, Ritchie B Tongo/EPA, via Shutterstock, Getty Images, Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images, Michael Tran/Agence France-Presse via Getty Images, Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images, Madeleine Hordinski for The New York Times
  2. The 2024 Election Will Be Unlike Any Other. Is the Media Ready?

    Journalists are facing “deep fakes,” sagging trust, global unrest and an unprecedented Trump campaign being run “from the courthouse steps.”

     By

    President Biden talking to reporters last week. Every presidential election cycle in recent memory has been shaped by the emergence of a new technology or the exploitation of an existing one. But 2024 will be more complicated.
    CreditErin Schaff/The New York Times
  3. Addressing the Tensions Between China and the Rest of the World

    U.S.-China trade is at a record high, but businesses and governments are wrestling with how to balance national security and commercial interests.

     By

    President Biden and President Xi Jinping of China during their meeting last month in California. Both men spoke of the need to avoid conflict.
    CreditDoug Mills/The New York Times
  4. In the Creator Economy, There Is Money to Be Made

    People from all types of backgrounds have become stars — and it’s a trend that’s expected to get even bigger and make them even richer in years to come.

     By

    Name, image and likeness deals have allowed college athletes, like Olivia Dunne, a gymnast at Louisiana State University, to participate in the creator economy.
    CreditAnnie Flanagan for The New York Times
  5. Silicon Valley Confronts a Grim New A.I. Metric

    Where do you fall on the doom scale — is artificial intelligence a threat to humankind? And if so, how high is the risk?

     By

    Dario Amodei demonstrates how the use of simple video games can be used to train the A.I. bots.
    CreditChristie Hemm Klok for The New York Times
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