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    Nvidia warns of growing competition from China’s Huawei, despite U.S. sanctions

    Chip giant Nvidia has flagged heightened competition from Huawei, despite U.S. restrictions on the Chinese telecommunications company.
    In an annual filing Wednesday, Nvidia listed Huawei among its current competitors.
    Since 2019, the U.S. has restricted Huawei’s ability to access technology from American suppliers, from advanced 5G chips to Google’s Android operating system.

    Dado Ruvic | Reuters

    BEIJING — Chip giant Nvidia has flagged heightened competition from Huawei, despite U.S. restrictions on the Chinese telecommunications company.
    In an annual filing Wednesday, Nvidia listed Huawei among its current competitors, including it in the list for a second straight year. The company, blacklisted by the U.S. for national security reasons, did not feature among Nvidia’s competitors for at least three prior years.

    Nvidia listed Huawei among its competitors in four of five categories, including chips, cloud services, computing processing and networking products.
    “There’s a fair amount of competition in China,” Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang told CNBC’s Jon Fortt Wednesday.
    “Huawei, other companies, are … quite vigorous and very, very competitive,” Huang said.
    Since 2019, the U.S. has restricted Huawei’s ability to access technology from American suppliers, from advanced 5G chips to Google’s Android operating system.

    Huawei’s revenue exceeded 860 billion yuan ($118.27 billion) in 2024, state media reported, a 22% jump in revenue from 2023, and the fastest growth since a 32% increase in 2016, according to CNBC calculations of publicly released figures. Huawei typically publishes its annual reports in March.

    The company’s revenue barely grew in 2020, and plunged by nearly 29% in 2021. Its consumer segment was hit hard, and even as revenue rose 17% year on year to 251.5 billion yuan in 2023, it was just over half of what the unit generated at its peak in 2020.
    The telecommunications company started to make a comeback in the smartphone market in 2023 with the release of its Mate 60 Pro in China. Reviews indicated the device offers download speeds associated with 5G — thanks to an advanced semiconductor chip.
    Just over a year later, Huawei launched the Mate 70 smartphone series that uses the company’s first fully self-developed operating system, HarmonyOS NEXT. More

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    FDA cancels vaccine advisory meeting for choosing flu strains for next season’s shots

    A March meeting of vaccine advisors to the Food and Drug Administration has been canceled without explanation, a member of the advisory panel told CNBC.
    It comes as Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a vaccine skeptic who now leads the Department of Health and Human Services, makes early moves that could affect vaccination uptake and policy in the U.S.
    The meeting of the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee, or VRBPAC, is held every March to pick flu select flu strains for shots released in the upcoming fall and winter. 

    FILE PHOTO: The headquarters of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is seen in Silver Spring, Maryland November 4, 2009. 
    Jason Reed | Reuters

    A crucial March meeting of vaccine advisors to the Food and Drug Administration has been canceled without explanation, a member of the advisory panel told CNBC on Wednesday. 
    The meeting of the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee, or VRBPAC, is held every March to select flu strains for shots released in the upcoming fall and winter. 

    But Dr. Paul Offit, a member of that panel, told CNBC that he received an email at 4:18 p.m. ET on Wednesday saying that the upcoming March 13 meeting is canceled. He said there was no indication of whether it will be rescheduled.
    “Who canceled this meeting? Why did they cancel the meeting? Will manufacturers now turn to the World Health Organization to determine strains for this year’s influenza vaccines?” Offit told CNBC. 
    The Department of Health and Human Services did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
    The canceled meeting comes as Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who now leads HHS, makes early moves that could affect vaccination uptake and policy in the U.S. Kennedy has a lengthy track record of being a vaccine skeptic. 
    It also comes amid a particularly brutal flu season in the U.S. CDC data shows the flu has caused up to an estimated 910,000 hospitalizations since October, which puts the season on track to be the most severe in at least a decade.

    Earlier this month, a separate meeting of advisors who help the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention make recommendations for vaccines was postponed to “accommodate public comment in advance of the meeting,” several news outlets reported. It is also unclear if that meeting will be rescheduled. 
    Kennedy also said last week that he will review the childhood vaccine schedule despite earlier pledges not to do so. He promised that a new “Make America Healthy Again” commission would investigate vaccines, pesticides and antidepressants to see if they have contributed to a rise of chronic illness in the U.S.
    Meanwhile, the Trump administration is weighing pulling funding for Moderna’s bird flu vaccine, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday.
    The country is grappling with a record-breaking bird flu outbreak that’s impacted dozens of cattle herds along with poultry flocks, which has sent egg prices skyrocketing. Its rapid spread in animals has raised concerns about broader spread to humans.” More

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    Eli Lilly plans at least $27 billion in new U.S. manufacturing investments

    Eli Lilly said it will invest at least $27 billion to build four new manufacturing sites in the U.S. as demand for its weight loss and diabetes injections soars and the company develops new drugs.
    The move comes as companies work to build goodwill with President Donald Trump, who has emphasized reshoring manufacturing to the U.S. and reducing reliance on foreign supply chains. 
    The announcement brings Eli Lilly’s total U.S. manufacturing investments to more than $50 billion in recent years.

    Eli Lilly on Wednesday said it will invest at least $27 billion to build four new manufacturing sites in the U.S., as demand for its blockbuster weight loss and diabetes injections soars and the company develops new drugs for other conditions.
    It comes as drugmakers and companies across different industries work to build goodwill with President Donald Trump, who has emphasized reshoring manufacturing to the U.S. and reducing reliance on foreign supply chains. He has threatened companies — and pharmaceutical businesses in particular — with tariffs if they do not manufacture products in the U.S.

    Eli Lilly made the announcement at an event in Washington, D.C. — emphasizing the political undertones of the strategy. The event featured several speakers from the Trump administration, including Kevin Hassett, director of the White House National Economic Council, and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, who explicitly tied the announcement to Trump’s policies.
    Lutnick said the investment is “exactly what the Trump administration is all about, which is building and manufacturing and reshoring in America, investing in America, building in America.” He thanked Eli Lilly for “doing exactly what the president was hoping would happen.”
    Lutnick added that “if you want to understand the tariff policy” of the U.S., “I have just articulated it.”
    The move brings Eli Lilly’s total U.S. manufacturing investments to more than $50 billion in recent years. The other $23 billion is from the company’s investments in new plants and site expansions since 2020, which has helped ease supply shortages of its popular drugs.  
    “This represents the largest pharmaceutical expansion investment in U.S. history,” Eli Lilly CEO David Ricks said at the event. “We’re making these investments … to prepare for the demand we anticipate for future pipeline medicines across our therapeutic areas.”

    Shares of the company closed more than 1% higher on Wednesday.
    Three of the future U.S. sites announced Wednesday will manufacture active ingredients in medications, such as tirzepatide, the active ingredient in Eli Lilly’s obesity drug Zepbound and diabetes treatment Mounjaro. Ricks noted that there is a “real gap in supply chain in the U.S. as it relates to active ingredient availability in our country.”
    The fourth site will extend the company’s global manufacturing network for future injectable therapies, he added.
    Eli Lilly has not decided on where the four new U.S. sites will be located, Ricks said. The company will be accepting location submissions through March 13 and will announce decisions on new sites in the coming months.
    Eli Lilly said the four new sites will create more than 3,000 jobs for workers such as engineers and scientists, along with 10,000 construction jobs as the plants are built. The company’s other U.S. plants include sites in North Carolina, Indiana and Wisconsin.
    The new investments aren’t solely dedicated to Eli Lilly’s current and future obesity and diabetes treatments. The company is charting its future beyond Zepbound and Mounjaro, with hopes to deliver drugs from its broad pipeline of products for cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and other conditions.
    Ricks said the company is optimistic about its pipeline across therapeutic areas, including cardiometabolic health, oncology, immunology and neuroscience.
    Still, the new investments build on the success of Zepbound and Mounjaro, which share dominance of the booming market for so-called GLP-1 drugs with Novo Nordisk’s weight loss drug Wegovy and diabetes treatment Ozempic. Some analysts expect the global obesity drug market to be worth more than $150 billion annually by the early 2030s, making it critical for both companies to maintain their share as other drugmakers scramble to join.
    During the event, Ricks took a shot at cheaper compounded versions of its injectable drugs, saying “America faces a growing threat from an influx of counterfeit and compounded medications.”
    Eli Lilly’s efforts to boost the supply of Zepbound and Mounjaro aim to ensure that eligible patients are safely accessing those branded treatments instead of cheaper compounded versions. Patients flocked to those unapproved copycats when the branded drugs were in short supply, or if they didn’t have insurance coverage for the costly treatments. 
    The FDA has since declared the shortage of tirzepatide over, which will essentially bar many compounding pharmacies from making copycats. 
    Hassett said the issue also “disturbs the White House” because offshore producers of copycat drugs are “threatening lives in the U.S.”

    More CNBC health coverage

    In another sign of the political goals of the announcement, Ricks touted Trump’s 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, saying that the legislation has been “fundamental” to the company’s manufacturing investments. He called it “essential that these policies are extended permanently this year.”
    Key provisions from that law are set to expire at the end of December — though a reduction in the corporate tax rate will remain in effect.
    That legislation, passed by a majority-Republican Congress during Trump’s first term, was the largest tax code overhaul in nearly three decades that slashed taxes for individuals and businesses. It cut the corporate tax rate to 21%, capped deductions for state and local taxes at $10,000, and expanded the child tax credit, among other efforts. 
    “Long-term progress will also require U.S. policies to continue to protect the intellectual property rights and foster an innovative environment where we can do our work,” Ricks said.
    Novo Nordisk has similarly invested billions in manufacturing to ramp up supply of Wegovy and Ozempic, announcing in 2024 it would take over three sites from contract manufacturer Catalent for $11 billion.

    Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO More

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    Trump plan to freeze funding stymies Biden-era energy rebates for consumers

    Some states like Arizona, Colorado, Georgia and Rhode Island have delayed phases of their Home energy Rebate programs for consumers who make their homes more energy efficient.
    They cited a White House freeze on federal funding that conflicts with President Donald Trump’s agenda.
    The rebate programs, created by the Inflation Reduction Act, aim to defray consumer costs for retrofits and utility bills while reducing planet-warming carbon emissions.

    Westend61 | Westend61 | Getty Images

    Some states have stopped disbursing funds to consumers via Biden-era rebate programs tied to home energy efficiency, due to a Trump administration freeze on federal funding enacted in January.
    The Inflation Reduction Act, passed in 2022, had earmarked $8.8 billion of federal funds for consumers through two home energy rebate programs, to be administered by states, territories and the District of Columbia.

    Arizona, Colorado, Georgia and Rhode Island — which are in various phases of rollout — have paused or delayed their fledgling programs, citing Trump administration policy.

    The White House on Jan. 27 put a freeze on the disbursement of federal funds that conflict with President Trump’s agenda — including initiatives related to green energy and climate change — as a reason for halting the disbursement of rebate funds to consumers.
    That fate of that freeze is still up in the air. A federal judge issued an order Tuesday that continued to block the policy, for example. However, it appears agencies had been withholding funding in some cases in defiance of earlier court rulings, according to ProPublica reporting.
    In any event, the freeze — or the threat of it — appears to be impacting state rebate programs.
    “Coloradans who would receive the Home Energy Rebate savings are still locked out by the Trump administration in the dead of winter,” Ari Rosenblum, a spokesperson for the Colorado Energy Office, said in an e-mailed statement.

    The U.S. Department of Energy and the White House didn’t return a request for comment from CNBC on the funding freeze.

    In some states, rebates are ‘currently unavailable’

    Consumers are eligible for up to $8,000 of Home Efficiency Rebates and up to $14,000 of Home Electrification and Appliance Rebates, per federal law.
    The rebates defray the cost of retrofitting homes and upgrading appliances to be more energy efficient. Such tweaks aim to cut consumers’ utility bills while also reducing planet-warming carbon emissions.
    California, the District of Columbia, Maine, Michigan, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina and Wisconsin had also launched phases of their rebate programs in recent months, according to data on an archived federal website.
    All states and territories (except for South Dakota) had applied for the federal rebate funding and the U.S. Department of Energy had approved funding for each of them.
    More from Personal Finance:Gold is hot — but a classic Warren Buffett rule suggests cautionWhat upcoming budget negotiations may mean for Social SecurityHow Trump, DOGE job cuts may affect the economy
    The Arizona Governor’s Office of Resiliency said its Home Energy Rebates programs would be paused until federal funds are freed up.
    “Due to the current federal Executive Orders, memorandums from the White House Office of Management and Budget, and communications from the U.S. Department of Energy, funding for all Efficiency Arizona programs is currently unavailable,” it said in an announcement Friday.
    Rhode Island paused new applications as of Jan. 27 due to “current uncertainty” with Inflation Reduction Act funding and executive orders, according to its Office of Energy Resources.

    The Georgia Environmental Finance Authority launched a pilot program for the rebates in fall 2024. That program is ongoing, a spokesperson confirmed Monday.
    However, the timeline for a full program launch initially planned for 2025 “is delayed until we receive more information from the U.S. Department of Energy,” the Georgia spokesperson explained in an e-mail.
    However, not all states have pressed the pause button: It appears Maine is still moving forward, for example.
    “The program remains open to those who are eligible,” Afton Vigue, a spokesperson for the Maine Governor’s Energy Office, said in an e-mail.
    The status of rebates in the eight other states and districts to have launched their programs is unclear. Their respective energy departments or governor’s offices didn’t return requests for comment.

    ‘Signs of an interest’

    While the Trump administration on Jan. 29 rescinded its memo ordering a freeze on federal grants and loans — two days after its initial release — the White House said the freeze nonetheless remained in full force.
    Democratic attorneys general in 22 states and the District of Columbia filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration, claiming the freeze is unlawful. The White House has claimed it is necessary to ensure spending aligns with Trump’s presidential agenda.
    David Terry, president of the National Association of State Energy Officials, said he is optimistic the rebate funding will be released to states soon.
    “For these two particular programs, I do not think [the freeze] will stymie the programs,” Terry said. “I see signs of an interest in moving them forward and working with the states to implement them.” More

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    After abrupt departure of Lucid CEO, here are the EV maker’s top priorities

    Shares of electric vehicle maker Lucid Group were down more than 10% Wednesday following a downgrade of the company’s stock by Bank of America and the abrupt departure of CEO Peter Rawlinson.
    The company is in search of a new CEO, stirring uncertainty among Wall Street analysts.
    Interim CEO Marc Winterhoff said the company’s top priorities include more than doubling vehicle production this year, narrowing losses and increasing customer awareness.

    Lucid Motors CEO Peter Rawlinson poses at the Nasdaq MarketSite as Lucid Motors (Nasdaq: LCID) begins trading on the Nasdaq stock exchange after completing its business combination with Churchill Capital Corp IV in New York City, New York, July 26, 2021.
    Andrew Kelly | Reuters

    Shares of electric vehicle maker Lucid Group were down more than 10% Wednesday following a downgrade of the company’s stock by Bank of America and the abrupt departure of CEO Peter Rawlinson.
    Rawlinson, who also served as chief technology officer at the company, was a driving force in its operations to this point, including the decision to go public in 2021. Investors considered Rawlinson to be the face of the company — and crucial to its success.

    The company – majority owned by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund – is in search of a new CEO, stirring uncertainty among Wall Street analysts.
    “We think the departure of Lucid’s (LCID) founder, CEO, and CTO, Peter Rawlinson is much more consequential than understood by the market,” BofA Securities analyst John Murphy wrote in a Wednesday investor note downgrading the stock to underperform. “We now expect product development to stall, consumer demand to be dampened, and anticipate additional funding opportunities could be put at risk.”
    Interim CEO Marc Winterhoff, formerly the company’s chief operating officer, will attempt to ensure that’s not the case for Lucid.

    Stock chart icon

    Shares of Lucid, Tesla and Rivian in 2025.

    Winterhoff said in an interview with CNBC his objective is to build upon Lucid’s success rather than change its course. His top priorities include more than doubling vehicle production this year, narrowing losses and increasing customer awareness and technology offerings.
    “We have a clear vision. Now my focus will be on execution,” Winterhoff told CNBC Tuesday ahead of speaking to investors on the company’s fourth-quarter earnings call.

    Gross profit

    Lucid remains far from profitable, but it has been narrowing its gross losses by increasing scale and making its products more efficient.
    Its GAAP gross margin, which includes production and sales but does not factor in other expenses, for was a negative 114% in 2024, improvement from a negative 225% in 2023.
    “We expect a significant improvement in gross margin in line with what we see in 2024 compared to 2023. So, we are on the right trajectory,” Gagan Dhingra, Lucid’s interim CFO, told investors Tuesday.
    For the fourth quarter, the company reported a net loss attributable to common stockholders of $636.9 million, or a loss of 22 cents per share, on revenue of $234.5 million.

    New products

    Lucid’s first product was the Air sedan, which it began delivering in late 2021. The pricey car has been praised for its styling and technologies, but demand for the vehicle hasn’t been as strong as anticipated.
    Winterhoff said the company will continue to produce Air sedans as it begins to ramp up production of its second product, an SUV called Gravity.

    Lucid Gravity Grand Touring SUV

    Winterhoff said production of the Gravity SUV will gradually build this year. He declined to speculate Tuesday on what percentage of the 20,000-unit production target the vehicle would represent. He noted Gravity ordering for customers in Saudi Arabia began earlier this month.
    “We’re expanding our footprint and markets we are very active in, and then absolutely increasing the ramp of Gravity, which is a big, big focus for us right now,” he said during the company’s investor call.
    Lucid also is in the midst of developing a new midsize vehicle platform that’s expected to launch at the end of 2026, which both Winterhoff and Rawlinson have described as critical to the automaker’s growth.

    ‘Double down’ on marketing

    As the automaker increases production and the number of vehicles it offers, Winterhoff said Lucid will “double down” on marketing and advertising to increase customer awareness.
    “I’m not planning to create a new vision or something like that for the company,” he told CNBC. “What I’m still focusing on is simply operational topics, like, for instance, increasing the deliveries for our customers. We will double down on marketing. You will see much more marketing from us.”

    A Lucid showroom in New York City on Aug 19th, 2023.
    Adam Jeffery | CNBC

    The company’s selling, general and administrative expenses were $900 million in 2024, including a $19.9 million increase in sales and marketing expenses over the prior year. The company’s total marketing and advertising expense wasn’t immediately available.

    New tech, partnerships

    The Lucid Air has been criticized for its lack of advanced driver-assistant systems such as Tesla’s “FSD” or General Motors’ “Super Cruise.” Certain Air models cost tens of thousands of dollars more than vehicles from competitors with such technologies.
    However, Lucid expects to release a new hands-free driving system for customers later this year.
    What Lucid lacks in driver-assistant technologies, it arguably makes up for in battery efficiency, as its cars are among the most efficient EVs in the U.S., according to federal data.
    Lucid has attempted to capitalize on its battery technologies by offering to sell them to other companies as a way to increase scale and revenue.
    Winterhoff said the company remains in “constant discussions” with companies about using Lucid’s battery technology but declined to provide additional details. More

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    Musk praises Bezos’ new rules for Washington Post opinion pages as top editor resigns

    Amazon founder Jeff Bezos said that the Washington Post’s opinion pages would now be dedicated to supporting “personal liberties and free markets,” in a move that will likely spark fresh accusations that he’s trying to curry favor with President Donald Trump.
    Viewpoints opposing those two “pillars” will be “left to be published by others,” Bezos told staffers at the paper he owns, drawing praise from some Trump advisors like Elon Musk.
    Bezos also said that editorial page editor David Shipley, who had held the job for over two years, decided to resign.

    (L-R) Lauren Sanchez, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Google CEO Sundar Pichai and Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk attend the inauguration ceremony before Donald Trump is sworn in as the 47th US President in the US Capitol Rotunda in Washington, DC, on January 20, 2025. 
    Saul Loeb | Afp | Getty Images

    Jeff Bezos, the Amazon founder and owner of the Washington Post, said Wednesday that his newspaper’s opinion pages would now be dedicated to supporting “personal liberties and free markets,” and that the organization would not publish opposing views.
    “We’ll cover other topics too of course,” Bezos said in an email to Post staffers that he posted on X. “But viewpoints opposing those pillars will be left to be published by others.”

    While the move garnered praise from some in President Donald Trump’s administration, such as Elon Musk, it was panned by some current and former Post staffers, including former editor Marty Baron, who said he was “disgusted.”
    Bezos said that editorial page editor David Shipley, who had held the job for over two years, decided to resign rather than lead the opinion section under the new policy.
    “I suggested to him that if the answer wasn’t ‘hell yes,’ then it had to be ‘no,'” Bezos said of Shipley, adding, “I respect his decision.”
    The Post will be “searching for a new Opinion Editor to own this new direction,” Bezos said.
    He asserted that while a major newspaper might once have considered it a service to offer its readers “a broad-based opinion section that sought to cover all views,” that is no longer the case.

    “Today, the internet does that job,” Bezos wrote.
    “I’m confident that free markets and personal liberties are right for America,” he added. “I also believe these viewpoints are underserved in the current market of ideas and news opinion. I’m excited for us together to fill that void.”
    Representatives for Bezos and the Post, as well as Shipley, did not immediately return CNBC’s requests for additional comment.
    By erecting new parameters around what opinions the Post can print, Bezos will likely draw fresh accusations that he is seeking to curry favor with Trump, who has long attacked the paper as “Fake News.”
    Less than two weeks before the 2024 presidential election between the Republican Trump and Democratic nominee Kamala Harris, the Post announced that it would not endorse either candidate, breaking with decades of recent precedent.
    The Post in a news article at the time reported that the paper’s editorial staff had planned to endorse Harris, and that Bezos himself made the decision to end the tradition.

    David Shipley and the staff of The Washington Post via Getty Images react as they learn they have won three 2024 Pulitzer Prizes during a newsroom gathering in Washington, DC on Monday, May 06, 2024. 
    Jabin Botsford | The Washington Post | Getty Images

    Four days later, the newspaper reported that at least 250,000 of its readers had canceled their subscriptions following the policy shift.
    After Trump won the election, Bezos’ Amazon joined with numerous other tech giants in donating hefty sums to the then-president-elect’s inaugural fund. While Bezos stepped down as CEO of the company in 2021, he still serves as its executive chairman.
    Bezos was also spotted dining with Trump at his Mar-a-Lago home and club in Florida. The tech megabillionaire later attended Trump’s inauguration on Jan. 20, standing alongside Meta boss Mark Zuckerberg, Apple CEO Tim Cook, Google leader Sundar Pichai and Musk, the Tesla and SpaceX CEO.
    Musk, who leads Trump’s government-slashing task force known as DOGE, praised Bezos for implementing the editorial change.
    Multiple staffers have recently quit the Post in protest. Cartoonist Ann Telnaes left the paper in early January, after accusing her bosses of killing her drawing of businessmen — including one resembling Bezos — genuflecting at an altar of Trump. When she resigned the same month, columnist Jennifer Rubin accused Bezos and other rich media moguls of enabling Trump and betraying their audiences’ loyalty.
    In reacting to Bezos’ announcement Wednesday morning, some have noted that Amazon is currently involved in an antitrust lawsuit brought by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.
    Prior to Trump’s inauguration, Puck News first reported that Amazon would pay $40 million to license a documentary about first lady Melania Trump. The Wall Street Journal reported this month that Melania will pocket more than 70% of that total.

    Read more CNBC politics coverage

    It is not unprecedented for a newspaper’s owner to involve themselves in editorial decisions, New York University journalism professor Adam Penenberg told CNBC. He pointed to the New York Post’s conservative shift after Rupert Murdoch’s takeover in 1976, and Sheldon Adelson’s push to make the Las Vegas Review-Journal more pro-business.
    But Penenberg noted that Bezos’ order for his paper’s editorial pages to comply with specific ideological views sets him apart.
    The announcement spurred a range of initial responses from reporters at the Post — some of whom said the news department will not be affected.
    “As I’ve stated before: Nothing changes,” wrote Dan Lamothe, who covers military affairs, on X later Wednesday morning. “We ask hard questions and hold those in power to account. That’s the job, whether those in power like it or not.”
    But chief economic reporter Jeff Stein called Bezos’ decision a “massive encroachment” into the paper’s opinion section that “makes clear dissenting views will not be published or tolerated.”
    “I still have not felt encroachment on my journalism on the news side of coverage, but if Bezos tries interfering with the news side I will be quitting immediately and letting you know,” Stein wrote on X.
    Baron, who retired as editor of the Post in 2021 after eight years in the role, slammed Bezos in a scathing statement to the Daily Beast later Wednesday.
    “What Bezos is doing today runs counter to what he said, and actually practiced, during my tenure at The Post,” Baron said. “I have always been grateful for how he stood up for The Post and an independent press against Trump’s constant threats to his business interests. Now I couldn’t be more sad and disgusted.”
    Philip Bump, a current Post opinion columnist, wrote on Bluesky: “What the actual f—.” More

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    How cheap can investing get?

    THE BATTLE between the world’s two largest exchange-traded funds has reached a pivotal moment. On February 18th VOO, an ETF tracking the S&P 500 that is managed by Vanguard, a giant passive-investing firm, took the crown as the world’s largest. Days later SPY, an ETF managed by State Street Global Advisors, another giant, reclaimed it. Both funds boast assets of over $620bn. More

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    Lowe’s beats Wall Street expectations as it starts to break out of sales slump

    Lowe’s beat Wall Street’s fourth-quarter earnings and revenue expectations and forecast modest growth in the year ahead.
    The company’s better-than-expected performance comes after rival Home Depot snapped an eight-quarter losing streak for comparable sales.
    Higher borrowing and home costs have slowed demand for home improvement projects.

    A Lowe’s store stands in Brooklyn on February 27, 2024 in New York City. 
    Spencer Platt | Getty Images

    Lowe’s topped Wall Street’s quarterly earnings and revenue expectations on Wednesday and said its sales could see modest growth in the year ahead.
    The company said it expects full-year total sales sales to range from $83.5 billion to $84.5 billion, which on the upper end would be higher than its total revenue of $83.67 billion for fiscal 2024. It said it expects comparable sales to be flat to up 1% year over year and earnings per share to range from approximately $12.15 to $12.40.

    Here’s what the company reported for the fiscal fourth quarter compared with what Wall Street expected, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:

    Earnings per share: $1.93 adjusted vs. $1.84 expected
    Revenue: $18.55 billion vs. $18.29 billion expected

    Lowe’s shares rose about 4% in premarket trading. The company is set to hold an earnings call at 9 a.m. ET on Wednesday.
    In the three-month period that ended Jan. 31, Lowe’s net income was $1.13 billion, or $1.99 per share, compared with $1.02 billion, or $1.77 per share, in the year-ago period. Revenue fell from $18.60 billion in the year-ago quarter.
    Lowe’s adjusted earnings per share figure excluded a $80 million pre-tax gain associated with the 2022 sale of its Canadian retail business, which added 6 cents per share to fourth-quarter earnings.
    Investors are looking for signs that the home improvement market will pick up again. Slower housing turnover and higher borrowing costs have kept some customers on the sidelines. Lowe’s net sales for the 2024 fiscal year totaled $83.67 billion, down 3% from the fiscal year prior.

    Shares of Lowe’s rose more than 2% in early trading, after the company’s outlook pointed to potential for improving trends in the year ahead.
    Comparable sales for the quarter rose 0.2%, boosted by online gains, high single-digit growth among home professionals and sales related to rebuilding efforts after Hurricanes Milton and Helene. That slightly positive metric ended eight consecutive quarters of comparable sales declines. It also exceeded Wall Street’s expectations. Analysts had anticipated a 1.8% decline in comparable sales.
    Yet in a news release, Lowe’s said those gains were partially offset by pressure on discretionary do-it-yourself projects.
    Lowe’s competitor Home Depot narrowly beat Wall Street’s fourth-quarter estimates on Tuesday and also snapped an eight consecutive quarter losing streak with comparable sales. Yet Home Depot CFO Richard McPhail said the company doesn’t expect the housing market or mortgage rates to change. Instead, he told CNBC that he thinks consumers will gradually get used to elevated rates as “a new normal.”
    Shares of Lowe’s closed on Tuesday at $242.39. As of Tuesday’s close, shares of the company have fallen nearly 2% this year. That trails behind the approximately 2% gains of the S&P 500 during the same period.
    This is breaking news. Please check back for updates. More