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DealBook, with founder Andrew Ross Sorkin

Highlights

  1. DealBook Newsletter

    Blue Origin Nears a Big Fund-Raising Round

    The rocket company founded by Jeff Bezos is set to take on external investors for the first time, at a $130 billion valuation.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinBernhard WarnerSarah KesslerMichael J. de la MercedNiko GalloglyBrian O’Keefe and

    Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin is gaining its first outside investors.
    Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin is gaining its first outside investors.
    CreditJoe Skipper/Reuters
    1. DealBook Newsletter

      Why Index Funds Haven’t Boosted SpaceX

      Some market watchers are puzzled that shares in Elon Musk’s rocket and A.I. company have stalled out despite major interest from Wall Street.

       By Andrew Ross SorkinBernhard WarnerSarah KesslerMichael J. de la MercedNiko Gallogly and

      SpaceX’s share price has languished since its trading debut last month, surprising many market watchers.
      SpaceX’s share price has languished since its trading debut last month, surprising many market watchers.
      CreditKarsten Moran for The New York Times
    2. DealBook Newsletter

      Trump’s World Cup Intervention Roils the Soccer World, and Beyond

      The U.S.-Belgium soccer game is turning out to be a huge deal even before it kicks off on Monday, thrusting politics into the spotlight.

       By Andrew Ross SorkinBernhard WarnerSarah KesslerMichael J. de la MercedNiko GalloglyBrian O’Keefe and

      FIFA has reversed the suspension of Folarin Balogun, left, a U.S. soccer player, making him eligible for the U.S. World Cup game against Belgium tonight.
      FIFA has reversed the suspension of Folarin Balogun, left, a U.S. soccer player, making him eligible for the U.S. World Cup game against Belgium tonight.
      CreditMartin Meissner/Associated Press
    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 the Jobs Market Has Wall Street and Washington on Edge

    A rebound in hiring has put more pressure on the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates. New jobs numbers are scheduled for release on Thursday.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinBernhard WarnerSarah KesslerMichael J. de la MercedNiko Gallogly and

    Kevin Warsh, the Fed chairman, has left investors mostly guessing about where he and the central bank stand on interest rates.
    CreditAnna Rose Layden for The New York Times
  2. Anthropic Won a Reprieve From Washington. Is It Enough?

    The company can restore access to its most powerful A.I. models. But Silicon Valley remains worried about the Trump administration’s heavier hand on regulation.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinBernhard WarnerSarah KesslerMichael J. de la MercedNiko GalloglyBrian O’KeefeIan Mount and

    Anthropic has reached a deal with the Trump administration that would restore access to its two most potent artificial intelligence models.
    CreditJason Henry for The New York Times
  3. How the Supreme Court Ushered in Corporate Chaos in D.C.

    Though the high court affirmed the political independence of the Federal Reserve, it gave the presidency huge control over dozens of federal regulators.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinBernhard WarnerSarah KesslerMichael J. de la MercedNiko GalloglyBrian O’KeefeLauren HirschIan Mount and

    The Supreme Court has largely amplified presidential power, potentially making it harder for businesses to navigate Washington.
    CreditTierney L. Cross for The New York Times
  4. What Deals Could Comcast and NBCUniversal Do After They Break Up?

    Comcast said it plans to spin off its big media division from its core broadband operations. That could lead to some big-ticket deal-making.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinBernhard WarnerSarah KesslerMichael J. de la MercedNiko GalloglyBrian O’KeefeIan Mount and

    Comcast plans to break itself up into two publicly traded companies.
    CreditGene J. Puskar/Associated Press
  5. Advertisers Are Good at Getting Human Attention. Can They Stand Out to A.I.?

    At Cannes Lions, marketers grappled with how to influence A.I. chatbots.

     By

    Denise Dresser, the chief revenue officer at OpenAI, this week during a session at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity called “Advertising in the Age of A.I.”
    CreditShane Anthony Sinclair/Getty Images for Cannes Lions

DealBook: A Special Section

More in DealBook: A Special Section ›
  1. Reckoning with the ‘New Normal’

    At this year’s DealBook Summit, there was an understanding that in the Trump era, business runs through the White house like never before.

     By

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    CreditKLAWE RZECZY
  2. In a Tumultuous Era, Global Alliances and Practices Are Upended

    While President Trump has made positive moves, panelists on a DealBook task force pointed to Ukraine, Venezuela and, especially, China as serious missteps.

     By

    Participants in a task force titled “The Global Reorder” included, from left, Samantha Power, Ehud Barak, Senator Chris Coons, Nicholas Kristof, Dr. Mark T. Esper, Fareed Zakaria, Avril Haines and David H. Petraeus.
    CreditNicole Craine for The New York Times
  3. From the DealBook Summit: Industry Leaders Share Their Insights

    Representing a variety of public and private sectors, guests from technology and finance to education and the artsparticipated in a lunchtime discussion designed to spark conversation around critical questions of the day.

     By

    Experts in business and politics gathered last week at the DealBook Summit in New York.
    CreditKarsten Moran for The New York Times
  4. For Business Leaders, It’s the Personal Connections That Keep Them Going

    Executives on a DealBook Summit task force panel said fear was not the way to build teams capable of navigating difficult times.

     By

    Participants in a task force titled “The New Rules for Leadership” included, from left, Alex Chriss, Beth Ford, Bob Jordan, David Brooks, Ynon Kreiz, Emma Walmsley and Pete Nordstrom.
    CreditShuran Huang for The New York Times

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DealBook Summit

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  1. The New Rules for Leadership

    As artificial intelligence, politics and market volatility reshape business, top C.E.O.s share how they balance purpose, performance and the pressures of modern leadership.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinEvan RobertsJulie ZannDan PowellKelly PiekloKatie McMurran and

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    CreditThe New York Times
  2. Leveraging Innovation to Revive the American Dream

    As technology accelerates and pressures mount, top executives grapple with purpose, innovation and resilience and what leadership means now.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinEvan RobertsJulie ZannDan PowellKelly PiekloKatie McMurran and

    BERJAYA
    CreditThe New York Times
  3. The Education of Higher Education

    As political pressure mounts and campuses face new cultural and financial strains, higher education confronts a test of purpose and survival.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinEvan RobertsJulie ZannDan PowellKelly PiekloKatie McMurran and

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    CreditThe New York Times
  4. The Global Re-Order

    As U.S. policies upend old alliances and norms, global power is shifting and the stakes are growing.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinEvan RobertsJulie ZannDan PowellKelly PiekloKatie McMurran and

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    CreditThe New York Times
  5. Should People Still Trust the Media in 2025?

    Media leaders debate how trust eroded, what audiences want now, and whether traditional journalism can still compete with personality-driven voices.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinEvan RobertsJulie ZannDan PowellKelly PiekloKatie McMurran and

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    CreditThe New York Times
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    DealBook Newsletter

    Investors Pile On as A.I.’s Rough Summer Continues

    Rising memory prices, more expensive iPads and a longer wait for OpenAI to go public: The sector that has driven markets skyward is hitting turbulence.

    By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Bernhard Warner, Sarah Kessler, Michael J. de la Merced, Niko Gallogly, Brian O’Keefe and Ian Mount

     
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    OpenAI Leans Toward Waiting Until Next Year for I.P.O.

    The A.I. company’s advisers are pushing its chief executive, Sam Altman, to move slowly after SpaceX’s stock has been volatile and as the start-up grapples with financial challenges.

    By Rob Copeland and Mike Isaac

     
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    DealBook Newsletter

    The Taylor Swift Wedding and a Hot New York Summer

    Should Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce tie the knot in New York City, their nuptials would be another economic event for the Big Apple.

    By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Bernhard Warner, Sarah Kessler, Michael J. de la Merced, Niko Gallogly, Brian O’Keefe and Ian Mount

     
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