Actress Diane Keaton, who starred in films including The Godfather and Annie Hall, has died, reports have said.
People magazine reported her death at the age of 79, citing a family spokesperson.
It said she died in California with…
Actress Diane Keaton, who starred in films including The Godfather and Annie Hall, has died, reports have said.
People magazine reported her death at the age of 79, citing a family spokesperson.
It said she died in California with…
Saturday evening, the UFC returns to Rio de Janeiro for the third consecutive year, bringing a 13-fight card to Farmasi Arena, headlined by one of the most beloved Brazilian competitors in the promotion’s history. Former lightweight…
DUNGEONS OF DOOM #1
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Cover by LEINIL FRANCIS YU
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“Ben Percy is a kindred spirit, and we both love horror books,” shared…
On October 7, 2025, Google announced a major international expansion of AI Mode in Search, bringing the feature to users in more than 35 new languages and over 40 additional countries and territories. According to Hema Budaraju, Vice…
(Bloomberg) — Central bankers, already uneasy about trade tensions and swelling public debt, will collectively confront a new worry in the coming week: the danger of a market crash.
Global policymakers and finance ministers will gather in Washington for the International Monetary Fund/World Bank fall meetings after a chorus of warnings that a stock bubble focused on artificial intelligence companies might burst before long.
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Kristalina Georgieva, the fund’s managing director, acknowledged the financial stability risk in a speech on Wednesday that previewed topics for discussion in the coming days.
“Valuations are heading toward levels we saw during the bullishness about the internet 25 years ago,” she said. “If a sharp correction were to occur, tighter financial conditions could drag down world growth, expose vulnerabilities, and make life especially tough for developing countries.”
Her warning was arguably more forthright than the IMF’s commentary from the October 2000 meeting, when its World Economic Outlook described “still high” equity valuations and the potential for imbalances to unwind “in a disorderly fashion.” Within months, the selloff momentum was such that the Federal Reserve was forced to deliver an emergency half-point interest-rate cut.
Even before US President Donald Trump’s renewed China tariff threat tanked stocks on Friday, officials saw alarming parallels. The Bank of England just warned of the risk of a “sharp market correction,” European Central Bank policymakers worried aloud, and the Reserve Bank of Australia this month also noted vulnerabilities.
Such concerns have been mounting for a while. ECB officials were presented with the warning of “sudden and sharp price corrections” at their last policy meeting more than a month ago, while Fed Chair Jerome Powell observed in September that markets are “highly valued.”
Fast forward to the coming week, and the IMF’s Global Financial Stability Report — a publication that didn’t even exist back in 2000 — may draw more attention than usual on Tuesday. The latest WEO, with economic forecasts for the world, will also be released.
Statements from Group of Seven or Group of 20 ministers attending the IMF gathering will also be scrutinized, as will the cacophony of policymakers likely to share their views.
UFC Fight Night: Oliveira vs Gamrot goes down this Saturday, October 11, live from Rio de Janeiro. Prelims start at 4pm ET/1pm PT, followed by the main card at 7pm ET/4pm PT. Main event scheduled for five rounds, all other bouts scheduled for…
Nano Banana has been a hit in the Gemini app, and Google is now bringing the model’s (Gemini 2.5 Flash Image) viral image editing and generation to AI Mode, as well as Google Lens.
In Search’s AI Mode, it starts with a…
After the biting disappointment of their loss against Poland, New Zealand found a whole other level to defeat Denmark 7-1 in the second set of playoff games and cement their place in…
This article first appeared on GuruFocus.
Oct 10 – Shares of two Semiconductor giants, Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD) and Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA), fell sharply on Friday after the U.S. Senate advanced a bill that could restrict exports of artificial intelligence chips to China, reigniting trade tension fears.
The proposed legislation would curb how many advanced AI processors American companies can ship overseas. The bill’s future remains uncertain, as President Donald Trump, who earlier eased chip export rules, could veto it. The House of Representatives is drafting a separate version that currently lacks export limits.
Investors reacted swiftly. AMD dropped about 5%, while Nvidia slipped roughly 2% in afternoon trading. The pullback reflected renewed concerns over Washington’s tightening stance on technology trade with Beijing.
Despite Friday’s fall, AMD has had an 83% year to date, with Nvidia increasing by about 41%. The two stocks have been major winners in the worldwide AI phenomenon, though the Senate’s action indicates that U.S. chipmakers face increasing threats in a climate of trade policy uncertainty.