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Tech Cuts Back
Long known as a lucrative and comfortable place to work, Silicon Valley is shedding jobs at a rapid clip
Biotech Startups Find Cash Is the Best Medicine
After years of abundant funding from VCs and public investors, capital has lately become a scarce resource
Cool Beer for a Warming World
To counter climate change, brewer Carlsberg uses science to score sustainable ingredients
China Rejoins The Party
The easing of Covid restrictions may be the boost the flagging world economy needs
Your Home Will Become a Power Plant
A home can be many things—a refuge, an investment, a money pit. So why not a power plant? In 2023 more US homes equipped with solar panels and batteries will start generating surplus electricity they can sell to their local utility.
Are You Ready for Some Big Data?
When the National Football League began seriously studying concussions six years ago, its focus initially was head trauma. Radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags were placed in helmets, shoulder pads and even mouthpieces to gather metrics about each player’s speed, distance, orientation and the direction his head moved. (The tags are placed on every player for all games and practices.)
Pursuits – A Bold Epoque for Art in Paris
Paris was crowned Europe’s preeminent contemporary art capital in October, when the international jet set descended for the inaugural edition of the inelegantly named Paris+ par Art Basel fair.
HOT SEAT DAVID ZASLAV
Stop, drop and roll, David Zaslav.
Five Ways Wine Will Change in 2023
Wine news in 2022 was both concerning and upbeat. Once again, scorching heat, record-breaking drought, spring frosts, hail storms and wildfires reminded vintners of the dire threat and cost of climate change, which will cause more eco-anxiety in 2023. On the positive side, vintners and drinkers are taking sustainability ever more seriously, and more innovations and adaptations are coming.
Upcycled Flour Is Rising To Meet the moment
About 50 miles north of London, Cambridge Science Park has earned the nickname “Silicon Fen.” The Fenlands region office hub is the UK home to Amgen Inc., AstraZeneca Plc and other biotech companies.
F1 to Women: We want you
Only five women have competed in Formula One. The last one to start in an F1 race was Lella Lombardi … in 1976. A former delivery van driver for her family’s butcher shop in Italy, Lombardi won fans with her punishing speed and grit. When a journalist asked her how it felt to pilot such big cars, she replied, “I don’t have to carry it, I just have to drive it.”
Hot Seat: ESG investing
Only a year ago, finance executives were waxing lyrical about environmental, social and governance investing, or ESG, a strategy that weighs risks from societal problems such as climate change and inequality and spots ways to profit from addressing them.
CLIMATE SCIENCE Leaves the Lab
A chemist at Stockholm University first scrawled out equations describing the greenhouse effect in 1896. Since then climate science has steadily advanced largely at research institutions and government agencies. They were the only places with the expertise, interest and budgets to fund research into geophysics and, later, computer models that simulated climatic changes.
Green Shoots Amid Europe's ENERGY WOES
After Russia invaded Ukraine in February, European governments vowed to slash their dependence on imported natural gas and speed the shift to clean energy.
Another OILY COP
The annual climate conference known as COP (for Conference of the Parties, in United Nations-speak) will take place from late November to mid-December in Dubai.
Here Comes the US Battery BOOM
If President Joe Biden gets his way, this year will kick off a bonanza of battery manufacturing across the US.
Carbon Capture GOLD RUSH
Past efforts to capture carbon dioxide so it doesn’t worsen climate change have been small-scale and littered with expensive failures. But supporters say the new tax incentives in the US Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) are transformative enough that, combined with the lessons of the past 20 years, the technology is finally ready to take off.
Real Estate Recovery? Depends Where You Live
For millions of Americans, the end of cheap money hit home—literally. The Federal Reserve’s rapid-fire interest-rate increases paralyzed the housing market as buyers decided to wait for lower prices and relief from mortgage rates that had doubled. Would-be sellers kept inventory scarce by clinging to low-interest loans and memories of home values that hit records in the pandemic. Pending sales plunged 39% in November from a year earlier to the second-lowest level on record—behind only April 2020, when the US was locked down.
The Year of the Corporate Bond, Finally
Investors found few places to hide from last year’s demolition derby, which hit corporate bonds harder than it did stocks on a global basis. But if Wall Street’s credit managers and prognosticators are right, 2023 will be the year that corporate bonds boom.
Private Credit Prepares for Its Big Test
War, inflation and recession fears proved to be devastating for financial markets in 2022. Yet in private credit-one of the most opaque corners of Wall Street, where small groups of institutions and financiers make loans directly to companies—the picture has never looked brighter.
The Reeducation of Young Bankers
Life on Wall Street has been so smooth for Drew Pettit’s generation that the 33-year-old Citigroup Inc. strategist decided to study financial pain. He started reading “the most bearish, miserable set of books I could potentially find.”
R.I.P. Cheap Money (2008-22)
Cheap money-an incredibly popular and influential feature of finance that led to a surge of wealth, speculative trading and booms in ridiculous investments such as meme stocks and digital images of cartoon monkeys died suddenly in 2022. It was 14 years old. Cheap money is survived by its estranged relative, expensive money.
HOT SEAT: Masayoshi Son
For years, SoftBank Group Chief Executive Officer Masayoshi Son directed unprecedented sums of money to hundreds of startups, inflating valuations worldwide by forcing rivals such as Tiger Global Management and Sequoia Capital to match his big bets.
SWALLOWING THE STARTUPS
The conventional goal for startup founders is to take their company public, with a top consolation prize being a lucrative sale to a larger company.
XI'S LONG GAME ON CHIPS
China’s government is protecting some of its chipmakers by spending lavishly to shore them up, just as weak demand is making it hard for chip manufacturers across the globe.
TRAINING YOUR REPLACEMENTS
In November a lawyer and computer programmer named Matthew Butterick sued the tech companies GitHub, Microsoft and OpenAI, saying a tool called GitHub Copilot that automatically generates computer code is essentially plagiarizing the work of human software developers in a way that violates their licenses.
TECHNOLOGY DOWN WITH THE AD DUOPOLY
For more than a half-decade, Alphabet Inc. and Meta Platforms Inc. have ruled the digital advertising market—the money machine that funds the modern internet. They’ve collected more than half of all online ad dollars, year after year, to the point that competitors and regulators feared there would be no realistic way to break their hold.
HOLLYWOOD HOPES FOR A RETURN TO THE OLD NORMAL
In 2021, as the pandemic raged, the talk of Hollywood was Project Popcorn: an initiative from WarnerMedia (then owned by AT&T Inc.) to simultaneously release all its films in theaters and on its HBO Max streaming service.
VEHICLE DEFLATION IS PUTTING THE BRAKES ON THE USED-CAR MARKET
Right before the global financial crisis, former Citigroup Inc. Chief Executive Officer Chuck Prince famously said that as long as the music is playing, you’ve got to get up and dance. In the pandemic-era car-buying frenzy, no business spent more time on the dance floor than the global auto industry, which had never before enjoyed so much pricing power.
Return of the Jumbos!
As global air travel comes roaring back from its pandemic-induced slump, airlines are racing to provide enough capacity, particularly for premium tickets on the long-haul flights enjoying a stronger-than-expected rebound.