2-9
Economists doubt AI will cut inflation enough for Fed to lower interest rates
In a snap poll conducted by the University of Chicago’s Clark Center with the Financial Times, nearly 60% of leading economists said artificial intelligence is unlikely to reduce inflation or borrowing costs meaningfully over the next two years. Their view contradicts Kevin Warsh, Donald Trump’s nominee for Fed chair, who argues AI-driven productivity will justify cutting rates from the current 3.5%–3.75% range without rekindling inflation. Many respondents also flagged tensions around Warsh’s push to shrink the Fed’s balance sheet further and his support for bank deregulation.
2-9
2-7
China's $26 Billion Humanoid Robot Push Puts it Ahead in Global AI Race
Since late 2024, Chinese national and local authorities have assembled over $26 billion in funds for humanoid robotics and related AI, while more than 140 companies, concentrated in Shenzhen and Suzhou, are now producing these machines. Analysts expect Chinese firms to ship up to 100,000 humanoid units in 2026 after securing over $300 million in orders in the second half of 2025, even as the U.S. retains an edge in core AI models but depends on Chinese manufacturing. This state-backed manufacturing head start, including subsidies like free land and purchase incentives, is raising concern among American policymakers and industry leaders such as Elon Musk about China's long-term dominance in embodied AI.
2-7
2-7
Anthropic's Claude update sparks stock selloff and positions firm as top tech performer of the week
Anthropic rapidly became the week's strongest tech stock performer after releasing new Claude tools that automate coding, legal work, and complex business tasks. The launch triggered a sharp selloff across software, legal, financial, and real estate tech stocks, as investors reassessed the risk to enterprise platforms. Anthropic's enterprise-focused strategy, high API usage share, and internal target to break even by 2028 are now positioning it as a leading rival to OpenAI.
2-7
2-7
MultiversX Integrates Google Universal Commerce Protocol to Let AI Use Crypto Wallets
MultiversX has integrated Google's Universal Commerce Protocol, allowing AI agents to access and operate crypto wallets directly on its blockchain. Through this setup, software agents can check balances, validate conditions and execute on-chain transactions without human intervention. The move positions the network as infrastructure for autonomous economic activity and advances machine-to-machine payments on public blockchains.
EGLD
EGLD+11.78%
2-7
2-6
How AI Can Strip Emotion From Retail Trading Decisions and Reduce Costly Mistakes
The article argues that most retail traders lose money because platforms push them into making repeated, emotionally driven decisions during volatile moments. Drawing on prospect theory and the growth of algorithmic execution, it suggests AI can move human judgment to earlier, calmer stages, where users define goals and risk while automated systems handle entries, exits, and position sizing. The author notes that institutional investors have long relied on such tools and contends that broader adoption by retail platforms in 2026 could significantly limit self‑inflicted losses without removing humans from the process.
2-6
2-6
SpaceX–xAI triangular merger grants tax deferral and sidesteps over $17 billion in debt
On February 6, 2026, reports detailed how Elon Musk used a triangular merger to place xAI under SpaceX while keeping xAI as a separate subsidiary. The all‑stock deal valued xAI at $250 billion and SpaceX at $1 trillion, allowed xAI shareholders to defer taxes on new SpaceX shares, and avoided triggering repayment on more than $17 billion of xAI debt. SpaceX’s pre‑IPO valuation has been marked at $1.25 trillion, while investors and analysts continue to assess how the expanded mix of space, AI, and social media activities affects the planned IPO.
2-6