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Amazon fails to calm tariff worries with worse-than-expected financial outlook

1 day ago
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Amazon failed to quiet concerns over how Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs would affect its e-commerce business as it reported its latest quarterly results on Thursday.Wall Street’s affinity for the tech giant faltered in response.The top line numbers from Amazon’s second quarter earnings report exceeded Wall Street’s projections.The tech company beat expectations with its revenue up 13.3% year over year to $167.

7bn.Market experts had estimated the company would report around $162bn in revenue and 9% percent growth.The company’s Amazon Web Services cloud computing division reported its sales reached $30.9bn in an increase of 17.5% year over year.

However, the company may not meet expectations on its operating income, reporting that it would bring in between $15.5bn and $20.5bn compared with expectations of about $19.4bn.Despite the generally positive revenue numbers, Amazon’s share price fell over 3% in after hours trading, a sign investors lacked confidence in the company’s immediate future.

Amazon’s stock was up about 6% so far this year before Thursday’s earnings call, following a rough first quarter that saw a decline due to uncertainty around how Trump’s tariffs would hurt its reliance on international sellers.The administration also criticized Amazon in April following a report that the company planned to itemize tariff-related price increases on its platform.No such itemization appeared on Amazon’s marketplace.Amazon’s earnings come as the company is engaged in big tech’s fevered spending race to dominate the artificial intelligence market.Companies including Google, Meta and Microsoft are pledging to spend tens of billions to advance the technology, while Amazon announced it would spend $100bn in 2025 with the “vast majority” of that going towards enhancing its AI capabilities.

The company’s CEO, Andy Jassy, touted Amazon’s AI investments in an earnings press release, claiming that it had deeply integrated AI services into many of its products and operations,“Our AI progress across the board continues to improve our customer experiences, speed of innovation, operational efficiency, and business growth, and I’m excited for what lies ahead,” Jassy said,Amazon has invested billions of dollars into huge datacenters to power its Amazon Web Services cloud business and expand its use of generative AI,In June, it announced a plan to spend $20bn building two facilities in Pennsylvania,Governor Josh Shapiro described it as the largest private sector investment in the state’s history.

Another Amazon facility in Indiana, the company’s biggest yet, stretches over 1,200 acres of land and is set to host at least 30 datacenters,Sign up to TechScapeA weekly dive in to how technology is shaping our livesafter newsletter promotionThe e-commerce giant has partnered with Anthropic, one of the biggest artificial intelligence startups to emerge from the recent boom, to increase its stature in the AI world and integrate the technology into its variety of services,Amazon has already invested $8bn in the AI company and may make another multibillion-dollar investment soon, according to a Financial Times report from this month,Amazon also struck a deal earlier this year with the New York Times to use some of their content for AI training purposes or for generating summaries with its products such as Alexa, with the Wall Street Journal reporting this week that the tech company would pay between $20m and $25m a year for the licensing rights,
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Trump to blame for high cost of living, Americans say in new poll

Americans are struggling financially, grappling with debt and the rising cost of living, and are blaming the Trump administration and corporate interests for worsening economic outlooks for working families, according to a new poll.Six out of 10 Americans place blame on the Trump administration for driving up their cost of living, according to a poll conducted by Morning Consult for the Century Foundation, which asked 2,007 Americans how they are managing the high cost of living in the US economy, who they think is to blame and what are the solutions.Sixty three per cent said Trump had had a negative impact on grocery prices, and 61% said he had had a negative impact on the cost of living. Nearly half, 49%, said the Trump administration had had a negative impact on their finances. Nearly eight out of 10 Americans, including 70% of Republicans, fear that Trump’s tariffs will increase the price of everyday goods

about 18 hours ago
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Car finance scandal: UK supreme court poised to rule on hidden commissions

The UK’s highest court is poised to give its verdict on the £44bn car finance scandal, which could pave the way for millions of motorists to claim billions of pounds in compensation for mis-selling.The supreme court judgment, which will be handed down after financial markets close at 4.35pm on Friday, will decide whether or not to uphold a finding by the court of appeal in October that hidden commissions paid to car dealers by lenders were unlawful.That ruling, based on test cases, said making such payments to brokers who arrange car loans without disclosing the sum and terms to borrowers was unlawful. The lenders involved in the case – FirstRand Bank and Close Brothers – appealed against that decision to the supreme court

about 20 hours ago
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UK house prices rebound as market recovers from June dip

House prices in the UK returned to growth last month, as the market recovered from a dip in June after the end of a tax break on stamp duty.The average price of a home rose 0.6% in July to £272,664, following the biggest month-on-month fall in more than two years in June, according to Nationwide.Britain’s biggest building society said the annual rate of house price growth also improved to 2.4%, up from 2

about 22 hours ago
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Trump threatens drug giants with crackdown over prices

Donald Trump has threatened to use “every tool in our arsenal” to crack down on pharmaceutical giants if they fail to cut drug prices for Americans within 60 days.The president wrote to executives at 17 companies on Thursday, demanding they match their US prices for prescription drugs with the lowest price offered in other developed nations.Current prices were an “unacceptable burden” on US families, Trump said, claiming they could be up to three times higher than in other countries.After returning to the White House earlier this year and pledging to bring down drug prices, the president claimed that “most proposals” from the pharmaceutical industry amounted to “more of the same”, accusing firms of seeking to shift blame and requesting policies that would pave the way for handouts worths billions of dollars for the sector.“Make no mistake: a collaborative effort towards achieving global pricing parity would be the most effective path for companies, the government, and American patients,” Trump wrote

1 day ago
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Rolls-Royce hits turbo speed. Now keep going for a decade | Nils Prately

Turbo Tufan strikes again. It’s almost becoming predictable. Every time Tufan Erginbilgiç, chief executive of Rolls-Royce, sets “midterm” financial targets, the aero-engine maker beats them, or looks set to do so, in no time.Back in February, Erginbilgiç was able to declare that the 2027 targets for operating profits would be hit two years early, so he set new ambitions for 2028. Six months on, even the refreshed numbers look conservative

1 day ago
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Air traffic control failure an isolated incident, says UK minister after meeting

A radar-related technical failure that led to hundreds of flights being disrupted on Wednesday was an “isolated event” with “no evidence of malign activity”, the transport secretary has said, after summoning the head of the UK air traffic control service, Nats, to account for the disruption.Heidi Alexander said she met Martin Rolfe, the under-fire chief executive of Nats, to understand what happened and what could be done to prevent a reoccurrence in the future after more than 150 flights were cancelled and others delayed by the latest glitch.It is understood that Alexander did not press Rolfe to consider his position, despite fresh calls from Ryanair for him to quit.Most of the disruption from the brief stoppage came at Heathrow. A total of 84 departures and 71 arrivals were cancelled by 10pm on Wednesday, and some inbound flights were diverted to European cities

1 day ago
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How will Australia’s under-16s social media ban be enforced, and which platforms will be exempt?

1 day ago
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Met police to more than double use of live facial recognition

2 days ago
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Zuckerberg claims ‘superintelligence is now in sight’ as Meta lavishes billions on AI

2 days ago
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Wall Street delighted with Microsoft as it spends $100bn on AI

2 days ago
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YouTube to gauge US users’ ages with AI after UK and Australia add age checks

2 days ago
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UK online safety law leads to 5m extra age checks a day for pornography sites

3 days ago