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Amazon reveals plans to spend $200bn in one year day after Bezos guts Washington Post

about 3 hours ago
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Amazon announced plans to spend $200bn on artificial intelligence and robotics this year, the latest tech giant to vow fresh enormous investments in the artificial intelligence arms race.The news of the investment comes one day after the Washington Post, owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, announced it was cutting approximately a third of employees.Amazon also reported $213bn in revenue on Thursday.The fourth quarter earnings of the ecommerce and cloud computing giant came in slightly below Wall Street estimates even as sales and growth surged.Amazon will increase capital spending to $200bn this year from $125bn, CEO Andy Jassy said in a press release.

Wall Street analysts were expecting spending to rise to around $147bn, according to FactSet.“With such strong demand for our existing offerings and seminal opportunities like AI, chips, robotics, and low earth orbit satellites, we expect to invest about $200 billion in capital expenditures across Amazon in 2026, and anticipate strong long-term return on invested capital,” Jassy said.Amazon’s investment is latest sign that he cloud computing giants will not be hitting the brakes any time soon on hefty AI investments.Amazon, Microsoft, Alphabet’s Google and Meta are expected to collectively spend more than $630bn this year.Revenue at Amazon rose 14% to $213.

4bn in the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2025, compared with $187.8bn in the year-ago period.The company reported net income of $21.2bn, or $1.95 per share, for the three-month period ending on 31 December.

That compares with $20bn, or $1.86 per share, in the year-ago quarter.Analysts had expected $1.97 per share on sales of $211.4bn, according to analysts polled by FactSet.

Amazon reported the fastest growth in its prominent cloud computing business, Amazon Web Services (AWS), in 13 quarters, with revenue increasing 24% to $35.6bn.Advertising revenue rose 22%, per a press release.Bezos, owner of the Post, is the executive chair of Amazon’s board of directors, a role he assumed in 2021 after founding Amazon in 1994 and serving as CEO for the better part of three decades.He purchased the Post for $250m in 2013.

Amazon stock makes up the majority of his $235bn net worth, which Forbes estimated sunk by $9bn, just 3.7%, after Amazon’s disappointing earnings.Shares were down close to 9% in after-hours trading.“The aspirations of this news organization are diminished,” former Post executive editor Marty Baron, who won 11 Pulitzer Prizes while helming the newspaper, told the Guardian in an interview.“I think that’ll translate into fewer subscribers.

And I hope it’s not a death spiral, but I worry that it might be.”
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US job openings dropped to a five-year low in December 2025, report shows

US job openings dropped to the lowest level in more than five years in December and data for the prior month was revised lower amid a softening in labor market conditions at the end of 2025.Job openings, a measure of labor demand, decreased by 386,000 to 6.542m by the last day of December, the lowest level since September 2020, the labor department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics said in its Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, or Jolts report, on Thursday.Data for November was revised down to show 6.928m job openings instead of the previously reported 7

about 9 hours ago
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Bank of England holds interest rates and ‘shocked’ over Mandelson; Rio-Glencore merger talks collapse – as it happened

Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey has added his voice to those condemning Peter Mandelson for leaking market-sensitive information at the time of the global financial crisis, our economics editor Heather Stewart writes.“I am shocked by what we are hearing,” Bailey said (see earlier post), when asked about the revelations at a Bank press conference.We do learn from that that there are times when … lobbying happens which has ethics attached to it which I do find shocking, frankly.Asked again about his personal feelings, Bailey, who worked with the Treasury on the response to the 2008 financial crisis, appeared to become emotional as he compared the actions of Mandelson to those of the late chancellor, Alistair Darling.Bailey reminds journalists at the Bank that he and his colleagues at the press conference, Clare Lombardelli and Dave Ramsden, all knew Darling (who died in 2023)

about 9 hours ago
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Airlines should tell UK customers the carbon impact of flights, watchdog says

Airlines and booking firms should give UK customers information about the environmental impact of their flights, the regulator has said.The Civil Aviation Authority urged booking sites to enable passengers to make “more informed travel decisions” by setting out estimates for carbon emissions for flights landing or taking off from British airports.New guidance published by the CAA aims to standardise the kind of data already published by some airlines and websites and to make it available at the time of booking so passengers can make comparisons.The regulator said it would start monitoring and possibly enforcing the new rules after April 2027.It said the carbon emission data should reflect factors such as aircraft type and fuel use, and take into account the type of seat occupied

about 10 hours ago
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Bank of England keeps interest rates at 3.75% as inflation concerns persist

Bank of England policymakers have left interest rates unchanged at 3.75%, but indicated that lower inflation as a result of cost-of-living measures in Rachel Reeves’s budget should pave the way for cuts in the months ahead.The nine-member monetary policy committee (MPC) voted to leave borrowing costs on hold, despite forecasting weaker growth and lower inflation than at its last quarterly forecast in November.But the narrower than expected 5-4 split in the MPC’s voting suggested further reductions in borrowing costs were to come. The committee has cut rates six times since mid-2024

about 10 hours ago
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Cornish tin mine could reopen with Trump administration investment

Donald Trump has aggressively pursued investment into hi-tech industries in recent months, but the US administration has now set its sights on a more traditional sector: tin mining in Cornwall.The South Crofty mine, near the village of Pool, could start up again after nearly three decades aided by a potential $225m (£166m) investment from across the Atlantic, creating 300 jobs.The site dates back to the 1600s but closed in 1998; there have since been repeated attempts to reopen it.Cornish Metals, its owner, said on Thursday it had received a letter of funding interest from the official export credit agency of the US to develop the site. Any investment would depend on the mine supplying tin to the US, which considers the metal to be a critical mineral

about 11 hours ago
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Anger over Scottish salmon farm inspections amid 35m unexpected fish deaths

Scottish salmon farmers recorded more than 35m unexpected salmon deaths in just under three years but there were only two unannounced inspections of facilities over the same period.In December, the Scottish government’s secretary for rural affairs, Mairi Gougeon, said that there was “a really robust regulatory regime when it comes to fin-fish aquaculture” but animal welfare campaigners say the figures call that claim into question.According to a freedom of information request by Animal Equality UK, the Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA), which is responsible for enforcing welfare legislation, inspected just 21 of Scotland’s 213 active salmon farms, between January 2023 and October 2025. None of the 20 worst-performing sites, which together accounted for more than 10m deaths, were inspected.Additionally, the Scottish government’s website says that unannounced inspections are a “statutory requirement” but only two were carried out between January 2023 and September 2025, both of which were in 2024

about 12 hours ago
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Bald eagles and Lynyrd Skynyrd: is Budweiser’s all-American Super Bowl ad serious?

about 4 hours ago
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Barclays reportedly cuts ties with lobbying firm co-founded by Peter Mandelson

about 6 hours ago
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Amazon reveals plans to spend $200bn in one year day after Bezos guts Washington Post

about 3 hours ago
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Bitcoin loses half its value in three months amid crypto crunch

about 4 hours ago
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Bielle-Biarrey stars as France outplay Ireland to lay down a Six Nations marker

about 2 hours ago
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JD Vance’s first Olympic appearance unfolds with more photo-ops than protests

about 6 hours ago