Blog

  • S&P Global to Launch its First AI-Enhanced Sector Rotation Index

    NEW YORK, Oct. 23, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — S&P Global (NYSE: SPGI) today announced plans to expand its S&P Dow Jones Indices (“S&P DJI”) index offering with the launch of the S&P 500 3AI Sector Rotator Index, an innovative benchmark that incorporates artificial intelligence (AI), through machine learning, to analyze company data and market signals to forecast sector performance, enabling systematic and adaptive allocations across S&P 500 sectors. This launch represents S&P DJI’s first AI-enhanced index using predictive modeling as a tool and marks the beginning of a broader initiative to explore the use of AI in index design.

    S&P Global logo (PRNewsfoto/S&P Global)

    As the demand for smarter and more adaptive investment tools grows, S&P DJI continues to deliver innovative benchmarks that blend traditional index methodology with cutting-edge technology. The S&P 500 3AI Sector Rotator Index utilizes scores generated by 3AI using a machine learning model to identify the three highest-ranked sectors at each rebalancing date. Designed to provide adaptive exposure to U.S. equity sectors, the index employs a rules-based methodology that incorporates AI technology and represents an extension of S&P DJI’s leadership in factor-based indexing.

    “By applying machine learning to identify sector rotation opportunities, we are offering market participants a dynamic, proactive approach to overweighting sector exposures within the S&P 500,” said Cameron Drinkwater, Chief Product and Operations Officer at S&P Dow Jones Indices. “While the index is driven by machine learning models, it is uniquely transparent, bringing together the benefits of active systematic sector strategies with the transparency and robust governance of high-quality index design.”

    3AI, a UK-based leader in AI-powered investment intelligence, provides the predictive analytics that underpin the S&P 500 3AI Sector Rotator Index. Trusted by global investment institutions, 3AI’s forecasting system applies explainable machine learning across global equities by mapping deep company analysis and business-cycle sensitivities to forward return forecasts, enabling adaptive, data-driven sector rotation. The collaboration integrates 3AI’s proprietary AI forecasting with S&P DJI’s rigorous index design, marking a milestone in the use of predictive intelligence for benchmark construction.

    “This collaboration transforms AI from concept to capability in index construction,” said Jacob Ayres-Thomson, Founder and CEO of 3AI. “By combining S&P DJI’s benchmark expertise with 3AI’s predictive models, we’re building adaptive, forward-looking indices that reflect how information dynamically shapes markets—advancing the next generation of intelligent benchmarks.”

    While S&P DJI has previously introduced AI-themed and multi-asset indices, this new initiative represents a significant advancement in using AI-related technology as a tool to facilitate constituent selection within an index.

    To learn more about S&P DJI’s AI-Powered Indices, visit: https://www.spglobal.com/spdji/en/index-family/dividends-factors/ai-powered/ai-powered/#overview 

    Learn more about Artificial Intelligence at S&P Global: https://www.spglobal.com/en/research-insights/market-insights/artificial-intelligence 

    For more information about S&P Dow Jones Indices: https://www.spglobal.com/spdji/en/.

    Media Contacts:

    Silke Mcguinness 
    S&P Dow Jones Indices
    (+1) 415 205 8414
    silke.mcguinness@spglobal.com 

    Alyssa Augustyn
    Americas Communications
    (+1) 773 919 4732
    alyssa.augustyn@spglobal.com

    Asti Michou
    EMEA Communications
    +44 (0) 79 70 887 863
    asti.michou@spglobal.com 

    Orla O’Brien
    S&P Global
    +1 857-407-8559
    orla.obrien@spglobal.com

    ABOUT S&P GLOBAL
    S&P Global (NYSE: SPGI) provides essential intelligence. We enable governments, businesses and individuals with the right data, expertise and connected technology so that they can make decisions with conviction. From helping our customers assess new investments to guiding them through sustainability and energy transition across supply chains, we unlock new opportunities, solve challenges and accelerate progress for the world. We are widely sought after by many of the world’s leading organizations to provide credit ratings, benchmarks, analytics and workflow solutions in the global capital, commodity and automotive markets. With every one of our offerings, we help the world’s leading organizations plan for tomorrow, today.

    ABOUT S&P DOW JONES INDICES

    S&P Dow Jones Indices is the largest global resource for essential index-based concepts, data and research, and home to iconic financial market indicators, such as the S&P 500® and the Dow Jones Industrial Average®. More assets are invested in products based on our indices than products based on indices from any other provider in the world. Since Charles Dow invented the first index in 1884, S&P DJI has been innovating and developing indices across the spectrum of asset classes helping to define the way investors measure and trade the markets.

    S&P Dow Jones Indices is a division of S&P Global (NYSE: SPGI), which provides essential intelligence for individuals, companies, and governments to make decisions with confidence. For more information, including disclaimers, visit https://www.spglobal.com/spdji/en/.

    The use of “3AI” in the name of the index is a reference to the machine learning technology firm, 3AI, that provides the machine learning algorithm used by S&P Dow Jones Indices in the construction of the S&P 500 3AI Sector Rotator Index.  For more information, on the index methodology and construction, please visit: https://www.spglobal.com/spdji/en/methodology/article/sp-500-3ai-sector-rotator-index-methodology/ 

     

    SOURCE S&P Global

    Continue Reading

  • Nobody Wants This Airbnb Experiences Including Osteria Mozza Class

    Nobody Wants This Airbnb Experiences Including Osteria Mozza Class

    Fans of the Netflix smash Nobody Wants This that want a little taste of what life is like for the stars of the show will get their chance, thanks to a partnership between the streaming giant and Airbnb.

    Airbnb says that it is creating…

    Continue Reading

  • Earth photobombs the sun in satellite image photo of the day for Oct. 23, 2025

    Earth photobombs the sun in satellite image photo of the day for Oct. 23, 2025

    When the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) weather satellite GOES-19 turns its gaze toward the sun, scientists don’t expect to see our home planet. But there it was recently — Earth, drifting briefly across the edge…

    Continue Reading

  • Nikon Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards 2025 – Finalists – ABC News – Breaking News, Latest News and Videos

    Nikon Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards 2025 – Finalists – ABC News – Breaking News, Latest News and Videos

    1. Nikon Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards 2025 – Finalists  ABC News – Breaking News, Latest News and Videos
    2. Comedy Wildlife Awards 2025 – in pictures  The Guardian
    3. From a ‘smoking’ duck to a ninja squirrel: the funniest photos from 2025’s Comedy…

    Continue Reading

  • Senegal reports 22nd death in Rift Valley fever outbreak

    Senegal reports 22nd death in Rift Valley fever outbreak

    In a follow-up on the Rift Valley Fever (RVF) outbreak in Senegal, country health authorities report 277 confirmed RVF cases in six districts in the northwest of the country- Saint-Louis (240), Matam (13), Louga (12), Fatick (8), Dakar (2) and…

    Continue Reading

  • UK seeks growth via AI ‘lab’ and regulatory bonfire

    UK seeks growth via AI ‘lab’ and regulatory bonfire

    Other specific reforms that the government said it will take forward include changes to the system of merger review that currently operates.

    The government said it will “consult in the coming weeks on proposals to provide greater certainty for businesses on whether transactions will be subject to merger control; proposals to ensure remedies are regularly reviewed; as well as changes to how the CMA [Competition and Markets Authority] makes decisions in mergers and markets investigations”. Those reforms, it added, would include “replacing the CMA’s panel model for decision-making by replicating the Digital Markets Board Committee model, for both the CMA’s mergers and markets functions”. It said the changes “will not alter the independence of CMA decision-making” from government.

    Competition law expert Paul Williams of Pinsent Masons said the announcement builds on the UK government’s ‘strategic steer’ to the CMA earlier this year, emphasising the importance of economic growth and investment in the UK, and the government’s initial proposals to reduce regulation.

    Williams said: “The CMA has already responded to this agenda by embedding new ‘4Ps’ principles – to improve pace, proportionality, predictability and process in its merger control functions and across its wider competition and consumer work – and has undertaken wide-ranging consultation on updating its guidance, including proposals for a more flexible approach to merger remedies. This evolving CMA approach looks to be further developed by reforms the UK government is now contemplating. Whilst the government strives for a more business-friendly regime to drive dealmaking, growth and investment, it will need to ensure the CMA’s independence and competition oversight role is safeguarded.”

    The government has also invited businesses to have their say on what further regulatory reform it should pursue in future – including by highlighting specific “examples of specific rules that impose unnecessary costs or burdens” and by detailing how the way regulations are applied can “delay or prevent future business opportunities being taken up”. Businesses can provide their input via an online questionnaire up until 16 December.

    Public policy expert William Hall of Pinsent Masons said: “With the government preparing for the crucial upcoming Budget, this regulatory reform package is one of many levers chancellor Rachel Reeves is pulling in an effort to boost economic growth.”

    “Prime minister Sir Keir Starmer and his team have put effective delivery at the heart of their political vision for the country. They view economic growth through streamlined regulation, attracting investment and careful intentions as the key way to prove to the electorate that they have succeeded in delivering,” he added.

    In relation to its AI Growth Lab plans, the government said the initiative will be modelled on existing regulatory sandboxes – such as the pioneering fintech sandbox run by the Financial Conduct Authority – but would be operate in a more dynamic fashion by providing for AI testing in response to specific innovation arising in the market.

    This, it said, would “enable businesses and regulators to trial novel AI products and generate real-world evidence of their impact” in “live market environments with targeted regulatory modifications”. That testing would be undertaken with regulatory supervision and, the government said, could speed-up regulatory approvals and potentially drive “permanent” regulatory reforms.

    Continue Reading

  • Cycling: Tour de France 2026 route revealed, beginning in Barcelona for the first time

    Cycling: Tour de France 2026 route revealed, beginning in Barcelona for the first time

    The Tour de France 2026 route was unveiled on Thursday (23 October), with the iconic road cycling race getting underway in Barcelona.

    For the first time, the Catalan capital in north-western Spain will host the ‘Grand Départ’ in a team trial…

    Continue Reading

  • Novel PET scan quickly predicts functional recovery after heart attack

    Novel PET scan quickly predicts functional recovery after heart attack

    A new approach to PET imaging offers a promising way for physicians to promptly identify patients who are at risk for poor functional recovery after a heart attack, according to new research published in The Journal of Nuclear…

    Continue Reading

  • What ‘A House of Dynamite’ Gets Right and Wrong About the Nuclear Launch Process – Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation

    1. What ‘A House of Dynamite’ Gets Right and Wrong About the Nuclear Launch Process  Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation
    2. In ‘A House of Dynamite,’ the End of the World Is Ho Hum  The Ringer
    3. Opinion | Hollywood Rediscovers the Bomb  

    Continue Reading

  • Dining out ‘under pressure’ as Britons cut back due to price rises, says YouGov | Hospitality industry

    Dining out ‘under pressure’ as Britons cut back due to price rises, says YouGov | Hospitality industry

    More than half of British diners say rising prices are the main reason they are eating out less, according to YouGov data showing that overall 38% of people are visiting restaurants and other eateries less often than a year ago.

    Among those cutting back, 63% cite higher costs as the main reason to dine out less frequently, according to the poll. Despite this downturn, more than two in five are still choosing to eat out at least once a month, while 8% of people say they never do.

    UK inflation was unchanged last month at 3.8%, confounding expectations of a rise, in welcome news for the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, as she plans for her crucial budget next month.

    However, inflation is still well above the government’s 2% target, and cost-conscious behaviours are on the rise. Nearly half of British diners say they have altered their dining preferences with a view to saving money. Of these, three in five say they are choosing cheaper restaurants, while 52% say they order fewer items, YouGov found.

    Sarika Rana, director of consumer research at the polling and market research company, said dining out was “under pressure”. She added: “Six in 10 consumers say they are eating out at least once a month, yet nearly 38% of diners say they are doing so less than they did a year ago, citing rising costs. This represents an opportunity for more economic dining options. 59% of Brits who have altered their dining preferences say they are opting for cheaper restaurants.”

    Sainsbury’s has just launched Taste the Difference Discovery, which the supermarket chain says offers restaurant-quality food that people can eat at home. It said that the new collection was designed to meet a growing demand for premium food as shoppers are increasingly dining in and looking for new ways to treat themselves at home. The range of more than 50 products includes British wagyu, Aberdeen Angus steaks, and modern Indian ready meals with a curated selection of wines and spirits.

    Meanwhile the food entrepreneur Charlie Bigham has recently launched a range of luxurious ready meals in some Waitrose branches costing up to £29.95.

    Amid increased operating costs and consumer caution, some restaurants have been struggling to survive. Pizza Hut announced the closure of 68 of its restaurants this week, putting as many as 1,200 jobs at risk, after the company behind its UK venues fell into administration. Eleven delivery-only sites will also close.

    In July the trade body for the hospitality sector said data showed it had been the hardest-hit sector since the budget, accounting for 45% of all job losses. The chair of UKHospitality, Kate Nicholls, said: “The change to employer NICs in particular, was socially regressive and had a disproportionate impact on entry level jobs.”

    skip past newsletter promotion

    The YouGov survey found that 79% of British diners believe restaurant prices have increased in the past year, with baby boomers – those born between 1946 and 1964 – most likely to notice the change.

    Social media is the leading way consumers find restaurant deals, particularly among younger restaurant-goers. The poll of 2,000 people in Great Britain found 36% of people heard about restaurant promotions this way.

    Continue Reading