Category: Business

  • How Trump’s tariff threats could impact foreign policy

    How Trump’s tariff threats could impact foreign policy

    President Donald Trump is showing no hesitation in following up on his campaign vow to heavily utilize tariffs during his second term. 

    The president was quick to impose them on Colombia over the weekend when the nation refused to accept flights of deported nationals that had illegally migrated to the U.S., threatening retaliatory tariffs of their own. When the South American country then did an about-face and agreed to take back their citizens, Trump hit pause on the levies.

    President Donald Trump makes a speech via video-conference during the the 55th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland on Jan. 23, 2025. (Halil Sagirkaya/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon told CNBC last week that he views tariffs as “an economic tool,” and depending on how they are used, “They’re an economic weapon.”

    Psychotherapist and author Jonathan Alpert, who has coached numerous business owners and C-level executives on negotiating, says tariffs, or the threat of tariffs, can be a powerful psychological tool in negotiations because they leverage fear and uncertainty.  

    JAMIE DIMON SAYS TARIFFS CAN BE POSITIVE FOR NATIONAL SECURITY, EVEN IF INFLATIONARY: ‘GET OVER IT’

    “By imposing or threatening tariffs, Trump signals strength and an ability to inflict economic difficulty, prompting the other country to reconsider their position,” Alpert told FOX Business. “In Colombia’s case, the quick retreat shows how effective this ‘economic weapon,’ as Jamie Dimon calls it, can be when the stakes are high and the other party feels they have more to lose than gain.”

    However, Alpert says, applying this strategy to larger economies like China or the EU is a different story. 

    He argues those larger countries often have more complex and diversified economies, making them less susceptible to immediate tariff threats. There’s a concern that they might retaliate with countermeasures, which can escalate into prolonged trade wars with wider economic implications. 

    CANADA READY FOR TRUMP TARIFF FIGHT AS COUNTRY’S LEADERS THREATEN RETALIATION: ‘DOLLAR-FOR-DOLLAR’

    “The success of tariffs as a negotiating tool depends on the perceived balance of power and whether both parties have the political will and economic flexibility to endure the consequences,” Alpert said. “In many ways, it’s psychological warfare – and to Trump’s credit, he is masterful at it.”

    He added that ultimately, while tariffs can create short-term victories, they’re not a one-size-fits-all solution. 

    US and China economy and trade

    Trump has threatened to impose steep tariffs on goods from other countries, particularly Chinese imports. (iStock/Photo illustration / iStock)

    Monica Gorman, managing director at Crowell Global Advisors, who served as a trade and supply chain expert in the Biden administration, told FOX Business she doesn’t want to speculate on what the Trump administration will do, but historically, if a country is subject to new tariffs, it typically responds with retaliatory tariffs of its own – as we just saw with Colombia. 

    Similarly, she said, if a group of countries face increased tariffs with one big strategic partner, they generally sustain their trading volume by forming an alliance to trade amongst themselves instead. For example, the EU just recently signed a trade deal with a bloc of countries in South America and updated their agreement with Mexico in anticipation of possible higher U.S. tariffs. 

    GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

    Gorman says tariffs should be approached strategically, pointing to the old adage that “when all you’ve got is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail.” 

    “But both foreign policy and trade policy are complex,” she said, “and we don’t want to use a hammer when we should be using a scalpel…”

    Alpert agrees that risk lies in overusing tariffs can lead to creating long-term resentment or instability in global markets. 

    “For the U.S., the key will be knowing when and where to apply this pressure—and just as importantly, when to back off,” he said, adding, “Trump has had great success in the business world and his ‘Art of the Deal’ strategy seems to be effective thus far.”

  • Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates on DOGE: ‘could be a valuable thing’

    Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates on DOGE: ‘could be a valuable thing’

    Bill Gates recently offered his thoughts on the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).

    On the topic of President Donald Trump’s DOGE, the billionaire Microsoft co-founder told The Wall Street Journal’s Emma Tucker that “looking at government expenditures on a sort of zero-based budgeting approach could be a valuable thing.”

    Trump unveiled plans to set up DOGE in mid-November, just a handful of days after he won the 2024 presidential election. More recently, on Inauguration Day, he used an executive order to form the department.

    Washington , DC – January 20: President Donald Trump signs a series of executive orders at the White House on January 20, 2025, in Washington, DC.  (Jabin Botsford /The Washington Post via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The president and Elon Musk, the Tesla CEO who has been tasked with helming DOGE, have both said the goal of the department is to significantly pare back spending and boost efficiency within the federal government. In Trump’s executive order, it said the department will “implement the President’s DOGE Agenda, by modernizing Federal technology and software to maximize government efficiency and productivity.”

    BILLIONAIRE BILL GATES DETAILS DINNER THAT LEFT HIM ‘IMPRESSED’ BY PRESIDENT-ELECT TRUMP

    Gates said he believes the U.S. government’s deficit “needs to be brought down, because otherwise it will create a financial problem for us and so that effort could come up with some good things.”

    In fiscal 2024, the federal government had a $1.83 trillion deficit after bringing in $4.92 trillion in revenue and spending $6.75 trillion, according to the Treasury Department. The Congressional Budget Office earlier in January forecasted a deficit of $1.9 trillion for fiscal 2025.

    The Microsoft co-founder hypothesized DOGE will need to “look at everything” for potential cost-cutting “given the numbers that they’ve tossed around,” according to The Journal. He mentioned examples such as pension, defense and healthcare. 

    Bill Gates headshot

    LONDON, ENGLAND – FEBRUARY 15: Microsoft founder Bill Gates reacts during a visit with Britain’s Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to the Imperial College University on February 15, 2023 in London, England.  (Photo by Justin Tallis – WPA Pool/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “My view is, most departments there probably are 10-15%,” he told the outlet. 

    “I do worry a little bit that if you say, ‘hey, let’s completely get rid of things,’ some of the things that have long-term benefits” could suffer, Gates, who chairs the Gates Foundation, said. 

    “I obviously believe in HIV medicines, where the US is keeping tens of millions of people alive. If you cut those off, not only would they die when we have a cure on its way, but the negative feeling you have in, say, Africa would be worse than never having done the thing at all,” the billionaire told The Journal. “So parts of the budget I know well, yes, you could optimize, but I hope the value system still includes the half a percent that saves all those lives.” 

    Gates also said he and Trump had a lengthy meeting after the election where the Microsoft billionaire brought up health topics such as HIV and polio, according to the outlet. He thought Trump was “energized and looking forward to helping to drive innovation,” adding that he was “frankly impressed with how well he showed a lot of interest in the issues I brought up.” 

    Overall, DOGE is seeking to trim $2 trillion in government spending, with Musk telling Stagwell Inc. CEO Mark Penn in early January that it had a “good shot at getting” $1 trillion. 

    ELON MUSK’S DOGE MAKES ANOTHER HIRING PUSH

    DOGE on Sunday evening said it was “looking for world-class talent to work long hours identifying/eliminating waste, fraud and abuse” in software engineer, information security engineer, financial analyst and human resources positions. The department previously sought candidates in November. 

    Elon Musk

    UNITED STATES – DECEMBER 5: Elon Musk is seen in the U.S. Capitol after a meeting with Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., while on the Hill to talk about President-elect Donald Trump’s “Department of Government Efficiency,” on Thursday, December 5, 2024. (Tom (om Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    It is expected to complete its cost-cutting efforts by early July of next year.  

    In the same Wall Street Journal interview, Gates was also faced with a question about Kennedy, whom Trump has nominated to become the Secretary of Health and Human Services in the president’s administration. 

    “Well, he wrote a book saying that Tony Fauci and I kill millions of children and make billions of dollars with vaccines, and people can judge for themselves whether that’s correct or not,” he responded. 

    TRUMP’S MOST VULNERABLE NOMINEES RFK JR, TULSI GABBARD GET BACK-TO-BACK HEARINGS

    The first Senate hearing on Kennedy’s nomination is scheduled for Wednesday, Fox News Digital reported

  • The DeepSeek AI chatbot burst on to the scene: are fears about it overblown?

    The DeepSeek AI chatbot burst on to the scene: are fears about it overblown?

    China-based artificial intelligence (AI) startup DeepSeek’s release of new AI models that rival those made by leading U.S. tech firms roiled markets on Monday and prompted concerns about U.S. firms losing their edge in the AI race to Chinese rivals.

    DeepSeek released its R1 AI model last week which it said is 20 to 50 times cheaper to use than ChatGPT-maker OpenAI’s o1 model, depending on the task, according to a post on the company’s official WeChat account.

    DeepSeek’s AI assistant, powered by its new DeepSeek-V3 model, vaulted past ChatGPT to the top of Apple’s App Store. The company said that the model was trained with less than $6 million worth of computing power from what it said were 2,000 Nvidia H800 chips to achieve a level of performance on par with the most advanced models from OpenAI and Meta. The startup also rolled out its updated image generation model called Janus-Pro on Monday.

    The advancements made by DeepSeek with what it reported as being fewer, lower capability chips and a lower cost than spending on AI training by U.S. rivals prompted a market sell-off and a debate over whether the Chinese firm has upended American firms’ edge in the AI race.

    AI STARTUP DEEPSEEK FACING HACK, BLOCKS QUESTIONS ABOUT CCP

    DeepSeek’s AI chatbot blocked questions critical of the Chinese Communist Party, a FOX Business review found. (Photo Illustration by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Marc Andreessen, co-founder and general partner of venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, wrote in a post on X that “Deepseek R1 is AI’s Sputnik moment,” in reference to the Soviet Union’s early lead over the U.S. in the Cold War era Space Race.

    Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark wrote in his “Import AI” newsletter, “R1 is significant because it broadly matches OpenAI’s o1 model on a range of reasoning tasks and challenges the notion that Western AI companies hold a significant lead over Chinese ones.”

    While some tech sector figures and investors in the AI space see DeepSeek’s advancements as signaling the arrival of a new phase of AI competition, others are less convinced that it poses a broad challenge to the U.S. tech industry.

    WHAT IS CHINESE AI APP DEEPSEEK?

    Image of DeepSeek

    Chinese AI startup DeepSeek roiled markets with the release of its new AI models. (Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Dan Ives, managing director and global head of technology research at Wedbush Securities, wrote Monday in a note to investors that while DeepSeek’s LLM has clearly impressed the tech sector, it shouldn’t be viewed as a rival to more capable companies like Nvidia at this stage.

    “No U.S. Global 2000 is going to use a Chinese start-up DeepSeek to launch their AI infrastructure and use cases,” Ives wrote. “At the end of the day there is only one chip company in the world launching autonomous, robotics, and broader AI use cases and that is Nvidia. Launching a competitive LLM model for consumer use cases is one thing… launching broader AI infrastructure is a whole other ballgame and nothing with DeepSeek makes us believe anything different.”

    Ives sees the tech sector selloff spurred by DeepSeek’s emergence as an opportunity to invest in tech companies that are active in the AI space.

    “These are just the opportunities to own the Nvidia, Microsoft, Alphabet, Palantir, Salesforce, Amazon and broader tech ecosystem that is under heavy pressure today,” he wrote amid Monday’s selloff. “DeepSeek impressed the tech community with this LLM model… but this is not launching 100x the capacity/algorithms that is needed to even consider this a competitive threat in our view.”

    CHINESE APP DEEPSEEK HAMMERS US STOCKS WITH CHEAPER OPEN-SOURCE AI MODEL

    DeepSeek AI

    DeepSeek’s AI assistant topped OpenAI’s ChatGPT in the Apple App Store. (Christoph Dernbach/picture alliance via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Mark Malek, CIO at Siebert, observed in a note that while OpenAI’s ChatGPT and other models have “vast capabilities in natural language processing, while DeepSeek is created to be task-specific.” 

    Malek asked in his note: “Who or what was challenged by DeepSeek’s outing this weekend? Was it the hyperscalers, data security companies, network equipment makers, chipmakers, IC design software providers, AI users, etc?” 

    “No, on notice should be LLM (large language model) AI models like OpenAI, Google DeepMind, Anthropic (Claude), and maybe Meta’s LLaMA,” he explained. “Now let’s remember that these are software companies with vast resources that can easily modify their algorithms to reflect the current state of research.”

    GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

    “Did DeepSeek seek and find a more efficient processing model for AI? Maybe, but you can count on the incumbents to adopt any new techniques found, no matter who finds them. It is the basis for a competitive and rich market,” Malek wrote.

  • Trump says Microsoft in talks to acquire TikTok

    Trump says Microsoft in talks to acquire TikTok

    President Donald Trump on Monday said Microsoft was in talks to acquire TikTok, shortly after the social media app went dark last week. He further suggested that he would like to see a bidding war over the popular platform. 

    Trump previously said that he was in discussions with several parties about a potential acquisition of TikTok, which has about 170 million American users, and expects to make a decision on the app’s future within the next 30 days, Reuters reported. 

    The app was briefly taken offline just before a law, which required ByteDance to either sell it or face a ban, took effect on Jan. 19. However, after taking office on Jan. 20, Trump signed an executive order delaying the enforcement of the law by 75 days.

    The law was put in place because of concerns that the app was misusing the data of its users. 

    This story is breaking. Please check back for updates. 

  • Google Maps to update: Gulf of America, Mount McKinley in after Trump orders name changes

    Google Maps to update: Gulf of America, Mount McKinley in after Trump orders name changes

    Google Maps will reflect President Trump’s changes in the United States and will show the Gulf of America of America and Mount McKinley, Fox News Digital has learned. 

    Google will make the changes once the Department of the Interior updates the Geographic Names Information System. 

    TRUMP TO RENAME GULF OF MEXICO, MOUNT DENALI ON FIRST DAY IN OFFICE

    “We’ve received a few questions about naming within Google Maps,” Google posted on X Monday evening. “We have a longstanding practice of applying name changes when they have been updated in official government sources.” 

    Once the update is made, Google will “update Google Maps in the U.S. quickly to show Mount McKinley and Gulf of America.” 

    TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA – 2024/07/29: Logo of Google in skyscraper in the downtown district.  (Photo by Roberto Machado Noa/LightRocket via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Google also said that, in line with its longstanding practice, when official names vary between companies, Maps users will “see their official local name.” 

    TRUMP TO TAKE MORE THAN 200 EXECUTIVE ACTIONS ON DAY 1

    “Everyone in the rest of the world sees both names,” Google posted. “That applies here too.” 

    Google’s move comes after President Trump, on his first day in office, directed the Department of the Interior to rename the Gulf of Mexico as the Gulf of America and to again  name Alaska’s Mount Denali after President William McKinley. 

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    President Obama renamed the mountain to Denali in 2015, in keeping with a request from the Alaska legislature.

  • Trump crypto czar says Biden-era executive order hamstrung American AI

    Trump crypto czar says Biden-era executive order hamstrung American AI

    Cryptocurrency czar David Sacks on Monday backed President Donald Trump’s reversal of a Biden-era executive order that instituted guardrails on artificial intelligence technology but “hamstrung” American AI companies. 

    Sacks cited DeepSeek, a Chinese AI startup that that develops open-source large language models (LLMs). The company has been outperforming American AI companies like OpenAI and Meta. 

    The company recently unveiled R1, a specialized model designed for complex problem-solving, on Jan. 20, which “zoomed to the global top 10 in performance,” and was built far more rapidly, with fewer, less powerful AI chips, at a much lower cost than other U.S. models, according to the Wall Street Journal.

    SILICON VALLEY PRAISING CHINESE AI STARTUP DEEPSEEK: ‘PROFOUND GIFT TO THE WORLD’

    In a post on X, Sacks said DeepSeek R1 proves that the AI race “will be very competitive” and that Trump was “right to rescind the Biden EO.”

    David Sacks, co-founder of Craft Ventures LLC, speaks during the Token Summit in New York, U.S., on Thursday, May 17, 2018. The Token Summit explores the economics, regulation and best practices around blockchain-based tokens, protocols, and crypto-a (Alex Flynn/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    He said the order “hamstrung American AI companies without asking whether China would do the same. (Obviously not.) I’m confident in the U.S. but we can’t be complacent.”

    Hours after returning to the White House, Trump rescinded Biden’s executive order, which set in motion a sprint across government agencies to study AI’s impact on everything from cybersecurity risks to its effects on education, workplaces and public benefits.

    Trump said the order acted as a barrier to American AI innovation.

    “We must develop AI systems that are free from ideological bias or engineered social agendas,” Trump’s order says. It also “established unnecessarily burdensome requirements for companies developing and deploying AI that would stifle private sector innovation and threaten American technological leadership.”

    In a policy directive last year, the Biden administration said federal agencies must show their artificial intelligence tools aren’t harming the public, or stop using them. Trump’s order directs the White House to revise and reissue those directives, which affect how agencies acquire AI tools and use them.

    CHINESE APP DEEPSEEK HAMMERS US STOCKS WITH CHEAPER OPEN-SOURCE AI MODEL

    Image of DeepSeek

    A chatbot app developed by the Chinese AI company DeepSeek (Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “For the last four years, the Biden administration has basically prosecuted and persecuted crypto companies, really driving them offshore,” Sacks said on FOX Business’ “The Evening Edit” last week. “I’ve heard so many outrageous stories by founders, by entrepreneurs, the Biden administration would not tell them what the rules of the road were, and they would then get prosecuted. And what the industry wants more than anything else is regulatory clarity.”

    “They’re saying, ‘just tell us what the rules are. We will abide by them’,” he added. “And the Biden administration would never do that. And because of that, all the innovation was basically moving offshore, and America was about to lose this technology of the future.”

    Alexandr Wang, CEO at Scale AI, a San Francisco-based software company, spoke out over the weekend on the DeepSeek technology, calling its quick success a “wake-up call for America.”

    “DeepSeek is a wake up call for America, but it doesn’t change the strategy,” Wang wrote in a post on X. 

    GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

    Wang explained that the “USA must out-innovate & race faster, as we have done in the entire history of AI” and “tighten export controls on chips so that we can maintain future leads.”

    “Every major breakthrough in AI has been American,” Wang said. 

    FOX Business’s Stepheny Price, Breck Dumas and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

  • Scott Bessent confirmed by Senate to serve as Trump’s treasury secretary

    Scott Bessent confirmed by Senate to serve as Trump’s treasury secretary

    The Senate on Monday voted to confirm Scott Bessent to serve as treasury secretary following his nomination to the role by President Donald Trump.

    Bessent was confirmed on a 68-29 vote by the full Senate. 

    Bessent, 62, is the founder and CEO of global macro investment firm Key Square Group, which he has said he would wind down if confirmed as treasury secretary. The firm focused on macro investing, which is a strategy that leverages geopolitical and macroeconomic information to guide its approach to investing in various markets.

    He served as a key economic policy advisor and fundraiser for the Trump campaign. Bessent has been an advocate for economic policies such as lower taxes, spending restraint and deregulation that have long made up the core of the Republican Party’s platform, and has also been supportive of Trump’s use of tariffs in trade negotiations.

    TRUMP TREASURY PICK: EXTENDING TRUMP TAX CUTS ‘SINGLE MOST IMPORTANT ECONOMIC ISSUE’

    The Senate voted to confirm billionaire hedge fund founder Scott Bessent as Trump’s treasury secretary. (Chen Mengtong/China News Service/VCG via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    During his confirmation hearings, Bessent said that extending the Trump tax cuts is the “single most important economic issue of the day,” warning a failure to do so would result in a “gigantic” tax increase on middle class Americans due to the expiration of lower tax brackets and a larger standard deduction claimed by most taxpayers.

    “If we do not renew an extension, then we will be facing an economic calamity,” Bessent said. “And, as always, with financial instability, that falls on the middle and working class.”

    TRUMP’S TREASURY PICK BESSENT WON’T DISCRIMINATE ON TAX CHEATS, VOWS FAIRNESS

    Bessent said in his opening remarks that “President Trump has a generational opportunity to unleash a new economic golden age that will create more jobs, wealth and prosperity for all Americans.”

    “We must secure supply chains that are vulnerable to strategic competitors, and we must carefully deploy sanctions as part of a whole-of-government approach to address our national security requirements,” Bessent added. “And critically — critically — we must ensure that the U.S. dollar remains the world’s reserve currency.”

    TRUMP’S TREASURY NOMINEE TURNS TABLES ON SANDERS IN TESTY EXCHANGE ABOUT BIDEN’S ‘OLIGARCHY’ COMMENTS

    Scott Bessent

    The Senate Finance Committee previously advanced Bessent’s nomination on a bipartisan 16-11 vote. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The Senate Finance Committee advanced Bessent’s nomination to the full Senate with a bipartisan vote of 16 to 11 on Jan. 21, the day after Trump’s inauguration. Sens. Mark Warner, D-Va., and Maggie Hassan, D-N.H., were the Democratic senators who joined all of their Republican colleagues in voting to advance his nomination.

    During the presidential campaign, Bessent touted what he called the “3-3-3” plan that was modeled off the late Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s “three arrows” idea. 

    Bessent argued for setting a goal of achieving 3% real economic growth, cutting the budget deficit to 3% of gross domestic product (GDP) by 2028, and increasing U.S. energy production to the equivalent of an additional 3 million barrels of oil per day.

    TREASURY SECRETARY NOMINEE SCOTT BESSENT’S ‘3-3-3’ PLAN: WHAT TO KNOW

    Scott Bessent

    Scott Bessent, founder and chief executive officer of Key Square Group LP, during an interview in Washington, DC, US, on Friday, June 7, 2024.  (Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The role of treasury secretary carries a great deal of significance for conducting the president’s economic agenda.

    Treasury secretaries often lead negotiations with Congress over tax and spending matters. They also play a key role in dealing with foreign governments and financial institutions, as well as handling the operations of the Treasury Department and sub-agencies like the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

    During Trump’s first term as president, Steven Mnuchin served as treasury secretary for the duration of the four-year term after he was confirmed by the Senate on a 53-47 vote a few weeks after Inauguration Day. 

    GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

    Mnuchin served as a key negotiator with Congress on the debt limit, tax and spending policies, as well as COVID relief packages that were enacted in 2020 after the pandemic began.

    Fox News Digital’s Diana Stancy contributed to this report.

  • Nasdaq, Nvidia crushed by China’s DeepSeek update

    Nasdaq, Nvidia crushed by China’s DeepSeek update

    America’s AI race among U.S. tech titans got suckered after Chinese AI app DeepSeek crashed onto the scene, sending investors into reverse.  

    The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite nearly erased its gains for the year, falling 3% on Monday. 

    Ticker Security Last Change Change %
    I:COMP NASDAQ COMPOSITE INDEX 19341.833835 -612.47 -3.07%
    SP500 S&P 500 6012.28 -88.96 -1.46%

    DeepSeek’s model appears able to match the capability of chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Meta’s Llama but at a fraction of the development cost. It also rose to No. 1 on the Apple App Store over the weekend. It is also reportedly able to use reduced-capability chips from Nvidia.

    SILICON VALLEY PRAISES CHINA’S DEEPSEEK APP

    The chipmaker, a darling of AI, lost almost 17%. It’s the worst percentage day since March 2020, as tracked by Dow Jones Market Group. About $600 billion in market cap was wiped out and trimmed CEO Jensen Huang’s net worth by about $20 billion in one day.

    HOW DEEPSEEK IS SHAKING US AI DOMINANCE

    Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang holds a Nvidia Drive Thor processor at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on Jan. 6, 2025. (PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images)

    An Nvidia spokesperson told FOX Business: “DeepSeek is an excellent AI advancement and a perfect example of Test Time Scaling. DeepSeek’s work illustrates how new models can be created using that technique, leveraging widely-available models and compute that is fully export control compliant. Inference requires significant numbers of NVIDIA GPUs and high-performance networking. We now have three scaling laws: pre-training and post-training, which continue, and new test-time scaling.”

    Ticker Security Last Change Change %
    GOOGL ALPHABET INC. 191.81 -8.40 -4.20%
    PLTR PALANTIR TECHNOLOGIES INC. 75.44 -3.54 -4.48%
    MSFT MICROSOFT CORP. 434.56 -9.49 -2.14%
    META META PLATFORMS INC. 659.88 +12.39 +1.91%

    Other AI players, Google, Microsoft and Palantir, also saw steep losses, while Meta rose after it hiked capital spending plans to as much as $65 billion this year. 

    A handful of nuclear power plants also got slammed. Investors worry that the companies that control heating and cooling for AI may not see the demand if DeepSeek turns out to be the real deal. Constellation Energy, Talen and Vistra all lost ground. 

    Ticker Security Last Change Change %
    CEG CONSTELLATION ENERGY CORP. 275.00 -72.44 -20.85%
    TLN TALEN ENERGY 192.16 -52.90 -21.59%
    VST VISTRA CORP 136.96 -54.14 -28.33%

    WedBush analyst Dan Ives said in a research note that while DeepSeek’s model is “impressive,” he warned investors this is not a dealbreaker for the AI revolution and told clients to buy amid the sell-off. 

    “The bears dominate the weekend narrative and try to scare investors this is a black swan moment. It’s actually the opposite. If inference training accelerates it speeds up AI Revolution..bullish for hyperscalers, Nvidia and use cases. DeepSeek impressive LLM..it ends there,” he posted on X.

    The tech rout spilled into Bitcoin, which briefly fell below $100,000 before recovering some of those losses. 

    As investors sold tech, they rotated into more defensive names, including Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola and insurance company Travelers. These stocks helped propel the Dow Jones Industrial Average to a 289-point gain. 

    Dow Jones Industrial Average

    Bonds also fell with the 10-year Treasury yield hitting 4.529%, the lowest since Dec. 20, 2024.

  • AI startup DeepSeek facing hack, blocks questions about CCP

    AI startup DeepSeek facing hack, blocks questions about CCP

    DeepSeek is temporarily limiting new user registrations amid what the China-based artificial intelligence (AI) startup is calling “large-scale malicious attacks,” while users who have begun using its AI assistant note it won’t discuss topics that are politically sensitive in China, including the Tiananmen Square massacre.

    DeepSeek’s announcement of a new AI model last week that touted a comparable performance to OpenAI’s ChatGPT at a lower cost than U.S. peers spurred a surge in interest that propelled its AI assistant to the top of the Apple App Store ahead of ChatGPT.

    The sudden emergence of what’s perceived as a challenger to U.S. firms’ AI edge prompted a sell-off of leading tech stocks on Monday, while DeepSeek found itself battling a cyberattack and taking steps to curb sign-ups as it deals with those issues.

    “Due to large-scale malicious attacks on DeepSeek’s services, we are temporarily limiting registrations to ensure continued service,” DeepSeek wrote in a post on the company’s status web page. “Existing users can log in as usual. Thanks for your understanding and support.”

    WHAT IS CHINESE AI STARTUP DEEPSEEK?

    Chinese AI startup DeepSeek is facing what it calls “large-scale malicious attacks” that disrupted its services. (Getty Images)

    As of early afternoon on Monday, DeepSeek reported a partial outage with its web chat service along with degraded performance of its application programming interface. It also noted recent issues related to logins and sign-ups that occurred earlier on Monday and were resolved. DeepSeek hasn’t released more information about the nature of the cyberattack or when it plans to restore user sign-ups as of Monday afternoon.

    DeepSeek released its R1 model last week, which the company said is 20 to 50 times cheaper to use than OpenAI’s o1 model, depending on the task, according to a post on DeepSeek’s official WeChat account.

    CHINESE APP DEEPSEEK HAMMERS US STOCKS WITH CHEAPER OPEN-SOURCE AI MODEL

    DeepSeek AI

    DeepSeek’s AI assistant app leaped to the top of the Apple App Store after its release last week. (Christoph Dernbach/picture alliance via Getty Images)

    The model’s release prompted some figures in the tech sector to observe that DeepSeek’s model is a challenge to OpenAI and other U.S. leaders in the AI sector that have invested billions into developing AI models and expanding the chip infrastructure used to do so.

    Jack Clark, the co-founder of AI startup Anthropic, wrote in his “Import AI” newsletter, “R1 is significant because it broadly matches OpenAI’s o1 model on a range of reasoning tasks and challenges the notion that Western AI companies hold a significant lead over Chinese ones.”

    Marc Andreessen, co-founder and general partner of venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, wrote in a post on X that “Deepseek R1 is AI’s Sputnik moment.”

    While DeepSeek’s emergence has shaken up the global tech sector, users who are trying out the app have reported that the app appears to block responses about the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and politically sensitive topics.

    SILICON VALLEY PRAISING CHINESE AI STARTUP DEEPSEEK: ‘PROFOUND’ GIFT TO THE WORLD’

    Xi Jinping CCP

    DeepSeek’s AI chatbot declined to respond to questions about Chinese leader Xi Jinping as well as other politically sensitive topics in China, like the Tiananmen Square massacre, Taiwan’s independence and Uyghur persecution. (Florence Lo/Pool/AFP via Getty Images/File)

    FOX Business confirmed that when DeepSeek’s AI chatbot was asked about what happened during the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests that ended with a violent crackdown by the Chinese military, the chatbot responded, “Sorry, that’s beyond my current scope. Let’s talk about something else.” The DeepSeek chatbot offered the same response to a query about whether Chinese President Xi Jinping is a good leader. 

    When prompted with a question about the Uyghurs – a Muslim minority group that primarily resides in China’s Xinjiang region and has reportedly faced mass human rights abuses at the hands of the CCP – the DeepSeek app initially appeared to post a lengthy response acknowledging that it’s a contentious topic. However, it stopped typing, and the response disappeared and was replaced by its message about the topic being beyond its current scope.

    DeepSeek’s chatbot was also asked whether Taiwan, a self-governing democratic nation that has been independent since the end of the Chinese Civil War, is a country. The CCP has vowed to compel Taiwan’s reunification with mainland China, by force if necessary.

    GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

    “Taiwan is an inalienable part of China and there is no such thing as ‘Taiwan independence.’ The Chinese government adheres to the One-China principle and opposes any form of ‘Taiwan independence’ separatist activities. We are committed to achieving the complete reunification of the motherland through peaceful means and have always promoted the peaceful development of cross-strait relations. This is the common aspiration of all Chinese people,” DeepSeek’s chatbot wrote.

    U.S. House Select Committee on the CCP Chair John Moolenaar, R-Mich., said in a statement, “DeepSeek – a new AI model controlled by the Chinese Communist Party – openly erases the CCP’s history of atrocities and oppression. The U.S. cannot allow CCP models such as DeepSeek to risk our national security and leverage our technology to advance their AI ambitions. We must work to swiftly place stronger export controls on technologies critical to DeepSeek’s AI infrastructure.”

    FOX Business’ Madison Alworth and Chase Williams contributed to this report.

  • Target facing retribution at home for rolling back DEI intiatives

    Target facing retribution at home for rolling back DEI intiatives

    Target’s decision to scale back its diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs is being met with backlash from the LGBTQ+ community on the Minneapolis-headquartered retailer’s home turf.

    Target announced Friday that it will implement some changes to its “Belonging at the Bullseye” strategy, including ending its three-year DEI goals and ending its Racial Equity Action and Change (REACH) initiatives in 2025, as planned.

    Shopping carts outside a Target store in Albany, California, US, on Monday, Nov. 18, 2024. Target Corp. is facing pushback from the LGBTQ+ community in its hometown for scaling back on DEI. (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Then over the weekend, organizers of the Twin Cities Pride Festival — of which Target has been a longtime sponsor — said the retailer is no longer welcome.

    Andi Otto, Twin Cities Pride executive director, told MPR News that he made the decision to boot Target from any involvement in this year’s festivities due to their rolling back their DEI initiatives.

    WHAT CAUSED THE REVOLT AGAINST DEI IN AMERICA?

    “In the current climate that we are having to live in as a community, I made the decision that it would not be in the best interest of our community to have Target’s presence at Pride or the parade this year,” Otto told the outlet.

    Target Pride merchandise

    Signage for Target Corp.’s “#TakePride” initiative sits above products displayed for sale at a company store in Chicago, Illinois, U.S., on Monday, May 16, 2016.  (Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Ticker Security Last Change Change %
    TGT TARGET CORP. 142.49 +4.62 +3.35%

    Twin Cities Pride also announced on social media that it had “made the bold decision to part ways with Target as a sponsor,” noting that the “choice means losing $50,000 in funding.” 

    A fundraiser posted by the group had earned nearly $28,000 of its $50,000 goal as of this writing.

    COSTCO SHAREHOLDERS REJECT ANTI-DEI MEASURE

    Target did not immediately respond to FOX Business’ request for comment on Twin City Pride’s decision.

    Target announced the rollback of its DEI programs following President Donald Trump’s executive order to review such initiatives. The move adds Target to a growing list of companies scaling back or eliminating their DEI efforts as these programs come under increased scrutiny.

    A slew of companies, including Amazon, Lowe’s, Meta, McDonald’s, American Airlines and Boeing, have pulled back on their DEI programs over the past year amid pressure.

    GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

    However, some companies, such as Costco, have resisted activist pressure, publicly reaffirming their commitment to maintaining DEI policies.