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  • Badgers finish in 26th at National Championship

    Badgers finish in 26th at National Championship

    COLOMBIA, Mo. – The Wisconsin women’s cross country finished in 26th place at the NCAA National Championship. Kylie Finger led the Badgers, finishing 100th overall and clocking a new personal best, covering the 6k course in 19 minutes, 57.4…

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  • Google redesigns menus for Material 3 Expressive

    Google redesigns menus for Material 3 Expressive

    Following the initial wave of Material 3 Expressive, Google is working to redesign the remaining components to the latest design language, and menus are up this month. 

    M3 Expressive introduces “vertical menus” that have…

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  • Varsapura adds some flashy-but-plain-looking, pyschic action to miHoYo’s Genshin Impact formula in its first gameplay trailer

    Varsapura adds some flashy-but-plain-looking, pyschic action to miHoYo’s Genshin Impact formula in its first gameplay trailer


    I think miHoYo might just have a bit too much money. Somehow, they have yet another game on the way called Varsapura, yet another anime-looking, open-world action game, this time by way of psychic mishappenings. As many have…

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  • Vagus Nerve Stimulation in Treatment Resistant Depression: New Lines of Thinking

    Vagus Nerve Stimulation in Treatment Resistant Depression: New Lines of Thinking

    CONFERENCE REPORTER
    Up to 35% of patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) do not respond to less than or equal to 4 treatment trials. This high global disease burden necessitates alternative neuromodulation treatment options, shared Todd…

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  • Vagus Nerve Stimulation in Treatment Resistant Depression: New Lines of Thinking

    Vagus Nerve Stimulation in Treatment Resistant Depression: New Lines of Thinking

    CONFERENCE REPORTER
    Up to 35% of patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) do not respond to less than or equal to 4 treatment trials. This high global disease burden necessitates alternative neuromodulation treatment options, shared Todd…

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  • Pakistan Shot Down Indian Rafales Because the Pilots Were Incapable: French Naval Commander

    Pakistan Shot Down Indian Rafales Because the Pilots Were Incapable: French Naval Commander

    A French naval commander has confirmed that Indian Rafale fighter jets were shot down during the May 2025 air combat with Pakistan, attributing the outcome to Pakistan’s superior handling of the battle rather than the technological…

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  • Ross Brawn on a ‘vintage’ 2025 season, F1’s three-way title fight and his star drivers

    Ross Brawn on a ‘vintage’ 2025 season, F1’s three-way title fight and his star drivers

    F1 fans have been treated to a spectacular show in 2025, with the gap between the front and the back of the field continuing to shrink, three drivers going wheel-to-wheel for the Drivers’ Championship, and plenty of others enjoying their moment…

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  • Clean Power Production for the Metals & Mining Industry » Babcock & Wilcox

    Clean Power Production for the Metals & Mining Industry » Babcock & Wilcox

    Steam Generation

    For more than 150 years, the Babcock & Wilcox name is synonymous with quality steam generation technologies. In fact, we wrote the book on Steam. From the initial patent in 1856 for the world’s first inherently safe water-tube boiler to diverse technologies using a wide range of fuels and the latest advanced steam cycles, our robust thermal energy solutions deliver reliability, availability and long-term operation.

    Our vast experience includes boilers for utility-scale power plants, industrial scale and package boilers, circulating and bubbling fluidized-bed boilers, recovery boilers for pulp and paper mills, and boilers for renewable energy applications.

    Learn More

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  • China controls this key resource AI needs – threatening stocks and the U.S. economy

    China controls this key resource AI needs – threatening stocks and the U.S. economy

    By Kristina Hooper

    AI relies on rare-earth elements to grow its infrastructure – and the U.S. relies on AI to grow GDP

    Capital spending on AI has been a key driver of U.S. stock market returns and continues to exceed expectations, comprising a large portion of S&P 500 SPX capital expenditures.

    Jason Furman, a Harvard University economics professor, calculated that 92% of total U.S. GDP growth for the first half of 2025 could be attributed to AI spending. Without AI-related data-center construction, he reported, GDP growth would have been an anemic 0.1% on an annualized basis.

    Given so much riding on the AI capex boom, it’s important to consider what could derail U.S. economic growth and the U.S. stock market

    One major risk is access to rare earth elements. Limited rare-earth access could present the U.S. with challenges similar to what it faced in the 1970s from its dependence on oil.

    Rare-earth elements are used extensively in artificial intelligence, including disk drives, cooling servers and especially semiconductor fabrication. Artificial intelligence has enormous computational and memory demands, which is why high-capacity, high-performance semiconductors are the linchpin of the AI build-out. Rare earths are also integral for national security – used in radar, lasers and satellite systems.

    From the 1960s to the 1990s, the U.S. was the leader in rare-earth elements production. In 1995, two decisions were made that had far-ranging consequences, dramatically changing the trajectory of U.S. leadership in rare earth elements.

    First, the U.S. approved China’s purchase of U.S. rare-earth magnet company Magnequench from General Motors, thereby acquiring a highly advanced technology that arguably would have taken many years to develop.

    Second, China applied to join the World Trade Organization, ultimately enabling it to sell its rare-earth elements to a global market. China was able to sell at a lower cost than the U.S., contributing to the closure of the U.S. mining company that produced rare earth elements, MP Materials Corp. (MP), in 2002.

    MP Materials was reopened for national defense use in 2017. U.S. production has since ramped up, with rare-earth production reaching 45,000 tons in 2024 – yet that’s still less than one-sixth of China’s production.

    Yet the U.S. Department of Defense’s lofty goal of meeting defense-related demand for light- and heavy rare earths by 2027 may not be achieved, given America’s rare-earth mining and processing limitations. Even if it is, significant commercial demand, including the enormous AI build-out, will not be met.

    China controls the supply

    China controls around 70% of the world’s rare earth resource output and about 90% of the world’s rare earth processing capabilities. Access to rare-earth elements has been a key bargaining chip in U.S. trade negotiations with China.

    As a result, the U.S. has been increasing efforts to diversify its rare-earths supply and gain reliable and adequate exposure to these elements through its allies. Australia and Canada, for instance, have significant rare-earth resources that can help support America’s rare-earth element needs.

    New technologies may also lessen or eliminate the need for rare-earth elements in various uses and make rare-earth element recycling more efficient (currently, just 1% of rare-earth elements are recycled). In addition, U.S. government policies can discourage or at least disincentivize demand for rare earth element-intensive products such as electric vehicles, as the Trump administration has done by eliminating EV tax credits.

    Rare earth element independence should be as high a priority for the U.S. as energy independence was 50 years ago. Until there’s a viable alternative to the China-dominated rare-earth supply chain, AI capital spending – and both the U.S. economy and stock market – are vulnerable. Accordingly, stock investors should pay attention to trade deals and policymakers’ comments, and consider supply-chain risks when evaluating AI-related investments.

    Kristina Hooper is chief market strategist at Man Group, which manages alternative investments. The opinions expressed are her own.

    More: Big Tech is spending on power for AI – whether Washington functions or not

    Also read: AI has real problems. The smart money is investing in the companies solving them now.

    -Kristina Hooper

    This content was created by MarketWatch, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. MarketWatch is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.

    (END) Dow Jones Newswires

    11-22-25 1347ET

    Copyright (c) 2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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