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Google signed a deal with the Pentagon to allow its Gemini AI to be used by the U.S. military for “any lawful purpose,” and when news of the deal leaked, close to 600 employees signed an open letter opposing it. “I spent the last 2 months trying to prevent this,” Alex Turner, a research scientist at Google DeepMind, the unit that builds the company’s Gemini models, said in a post on X. “Shameful.”
But Google’s management is likely to ignore internal resistance, Fortune’s Bea Nolan reports. Following an employee rebellion in 2018, Google cracked down on in-office activism by decommissioning a lot of the internal mailing lists and deleting the internal social network, one source said. “It is harder to organize internally now.”
Iran threatened to attack any U.S. ship in the Strait of Hormuz following President Trump’s promise yesterday that the U.S. Navy would guide ships through the Strait as a “Humanitarian gesture.” The head of Iran's central command said it would attack "any foreign armed force … especially, the aggressive U.S. army,” according to the BBC.
The price of oil spiked up from a low of $106 per barrel of Brent crude this morning to over $110, before settling back to $109.
“Iran’s parliamentary security committee head [Ebrahim] Azizi called [Trump’s] posts delusional,” UBS’s Paul Donovan told clients this morning. “The oil market reaction gives weight to the Iranian view. U.S. gasoline prices are approaching USD 4.5 per U.S. gallon, which is an incentive for the administration to use calming rhetoric to guide markets. This has less impact as the point of physical shortages moves closer.”
One of the controversies in last week’s decision from the U.S. Fed to leave interest rates at the 3.5% level was the number of dissenters—three—on a vote to use a specific phrase in the central bank’s commentary. The phrase is:
On its face, nothing in those words sounds controversial. The key is the word “additional.” The Fed had been delivering a program of rate cuts, so “additional” implies that the Fed’s next move will be another cut. However, this time around three members of the Fed’s rate-setting committee voted against the phrase, suggesting they are not convinced rates should go any lower.
If inflation continues to rise, perhaps driven by high oil prices, expect that “additional” phrase to disappear from the Fed’s future statements—and buckle up for rate hikes.
The big tech companies will probably spend up to $725 billion this year, building out AI data centers, according to an estimate by the Financial Times. But much of that spending will come in the form of debt. Already, tech companies have issued $400 billion in investment-grade and high-yield debt since mid-2025, according to an estimate by Goldman Sachs’s Amanda Lynam and her colleagues in a research note seen by Fortune.
“The scale and scope of AI-related issuance in the credit markets is likely to be, in many ways, unprecedented,” Lynam says.
China has a welcome mat for Trump: it just rewrote the rules on U.S. sanctions - Steve H. Hanke and Jeffrey Weng
A decade after the ‘Godfather of AI’ said radiologists were obsolete, their salaries are up to $571K and demand is growing fast - Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez
Chinese court rules firms can’t lay off workers on AI grounds - Bloomberg

U.S. GDP will have risen 75% in the seven years from 2020 (when it was $20 trillion) to 2027 (when it will be $35 trillion), Michael Hartnett and his colleagues at Bank of America forecast. They call this the “boom loop,” driven by increased government spending (up 60% since 2020) and inflationary trade and industrial policies. The “only thing that breaks the 2020s boom loop is bond [market] collapse,” they told clients in a note seen by Fortune.
The first sign of that collapse will be if the interest yield on 30-year U.S. Treasury bonds goes above 5%—an indicator that debt investors want to be paid more for holding the debt. They are near that right now. But if they move higher, “booms/bubbles always end with sharp jump in yields,” Hartnett says. “Then the door to doom starts to open.”
The “installed base” of iPhones, laptops, and other devices made by Apple currently being used by customers. The entire population of Earth is 8.3 billion.
Vladimir Putin hunkers down for fear of assassination - FT
Meme stock GameStop makes $56 billion offer for eBay in bid to rival Amazon - CNBC
Rudy Giuliani in "critical" condition in hospital, spokesperson says - Axios
Why Almost Everyone Loses—Except a Few Sharks—on Prediction Markets - WSJ
Drone Hits Upscale Moscow Tower as City Readies for WWII Parade - Bloomberg
‘The Death Zone’: How Russia Is Luring Africans to Ukraine - NYT

This chart shows wage growth in the U.S. broken out by income bracket and region. Notably, the rich continue to get richer faster than everyone else. But mostly, the poor are getting richer too—just not at the same rate. The best wage growth is in the South, for all income groups. Only in the Northeast does the old cliché ring true: The rich are getting richer up there, and the poor are getting poorer too. Data from Bank of America’s Liz Everett Krisberg and David Michael Tinsley.
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