Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
I think the potential of agentic is to rethink how work gets done overall. It challenges all sorts of traditional orthodoxies around how organizations execute the work at hand.
That's Jason Gerzades, CEO of Deloitte US, talking about the transformational potential of agentic AI. Join him later to learn why agents are a game changer for businesses across industries.
Get ready for pricier electronics as a memory chip shortage squeezes consumer tech. Plus another week, another partial government shutdown with no immediate end in sight. And we'll dig into the strangest American winter in years.
We have extreme cold on the eastern U.S., but then in the western U.S., we are dealing with record-breaking temperatures in many instances. We pulled readers, and 52% so far have said this winter is worse than they remember.
It's Tuesday, February 17th. I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal, and here is the AM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories moving your world today. A growing and acute shortage of memory chips is squeezing the makers of phones, laptops, and game consoles, sending consumer tech prices skyrocketing.
With AI demand gobbling up high-end semiconductors, our Korea bureau chief Tim Martin said that non-AI buyers are having to choose between raising prices, trimming margins, or reducing device memory.
So we've seen PC makers like Dell raise prices for some commercial laptops by as much as 30%. Acer, for some of their budget computers, have reduced the amount of memory that come in certain models. And with Xiaomi, a Chinese smartphone company, they got rid of the lower memory option for certain lines of phones.
So you can only get the higher memory options which allow them to protect their margins.
And Tim told us that even some of the bigger tech companies won't be immune to the memory shortage.
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Chapter 2: What is causing the rise in consumer tech prices?
These skyrocketing prices for the basic components for these products are translating into forecasts for lower sales. Because their products are becoming more expensive, people are buying fewer of them, which means they have less margin or more pressure on their balance sheets. This is a new type of threat to the supply chain that companies are really scrambling to try and figure out.
The heart of the issue is chip manufacturing, with new factories or fabs being built, but just not quickly enough. U.S. memory chip maker Micron is rushing to add capacity. It's spending $200 billion on factories in Idaho, New York, and Japan that'll open in 2028. Meanwhile, NVIDIA supplier SK Hynix is also building new fabs in Indiana and South Korea, with two new factories opening this year.
The U.S. government is emerging from the holiday weekend partially shut down. And partially here means just the Department of Homeland Security. Its immigration enforcement personnel are still working and getting paid, but not so for the TSA. Staffers at the nation's airports can still log hours, but likely won't be compensated for that until after the shutdown is resolved.
And with the House and Senate on break this week, that could be a little while. Lawmakers remain at odds over the terms of a DHS funding package, with Democrats mandating that ICE and CBP agents don body cameras, unmask, wear visible identification, and need warrants signed by a judge in order to enter homes.
On CBS's Face the Nation, Democratic House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and White House Border Czar Tom Homan squared off on those proposals.
Police officers don't use masks. County sheriffs don't use masks. State troopers. don't use masks. Why is it that ICE agents who are untrained are being unleashed on American communities with this type of lawlessness, violence, and brutality? They are wearing badges.
They're wearing placards to identify what agency they're from. But their name isn't on it, right? I don't know of another law enforcement agency in the country that has an 8,000 percent increase in threats.
That figure Homan cited is from a DHS press release last month. Just two months after taking up the job, New York City Mayor Zoran Mamdani is facing his biggest test to date. Today, he must present a balanced budget for the coming fiscal year, which kicks off months of wrangling with the city council.
And with a predicted budget shortfall of up to $12 billion over the next two years, Journal reporter James Finelli says it's a significant challenge for a mayor who vowed not to cut social programs.
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Chapter 3: How are non-AI buyers affected by the memory chip shortage?
Coming up, Goldman Sachs follows other Wall Street giants in scrapping DEI criteria for its board. And it's not just you. This winter is worse and weirder than usual. We'll tell you why after the break.
Access to affordable credit helps me pay my employees, but I don't really need it. Inflation is killing me. But who cares? Big retailers are making record profits. That's why we support the Durbin Marshall credit card bill. See? Banks and credit unions help small businesses make payroll. This bill would cut the vital resources they need. While increasing megastore profits.
They deserve it, don't they?
Tell Congress, stop the Durbin Marshall money grab for corporate megastores. Paid for by the Electronic Payments Coalition.
Hotelier Thomas Pritzker is retiring as the executive chairman of Hyatt after recently released documents detailed his ties to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Pritzker is a member of one of Chicago's most prominent families, which includes Illinois' current governor and a former U.S. Commerce Secretary.
In a statement, Pritzker said he exercised terrible judgment in maintaining contact with Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, and in a memo to the board, added that his departure would allow for a proper handoff at Hyatt.
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Chapter 4: What strategies are companies using to cope with rising costs?
The company has named its president and chief executive as board chair. Meanwhile, Wall Street's DEI retreat is continuing, with Goldman Sachs saying it will no longer consider race, sexual orientation, and other diversity factors when screening potential board candidates.
We exclusively report that the decision follows a behind-the-scenes request from a conservative activist nonprofit that owns a small stake in the bank, urging it to drop the DEI policy and requesting the proposal be circulated to shareholders. Goldman's board is expected to finalize the DEI walkback this month.
And we've learned that activist Elliott Investment Management has built a more than 10% stake in Norwegian Cruise Line and is planning to push for changes at the world's fourth largest cruise operator. Its shares are among the worst performing in the S&P 500 over the past five years, with its stock remaining near COVID-era levels despite the recovery in travel demand.
And between extreme temperatures, record snowfall, and surging energy use, if it feels like this winter has been an especially tough one, you're not wrong.
This winter is what many meteorologists have been calling a cool east, warm west pattern. Essentially, we have two different winters going on. Reporter Carl Churchill covers climate for the journal. We have an abundance of snowfall out east, but an unusual lack of snow out west. Many Americans on the East Coast have not experienced a winter quite like this in a long time.
We have seen record high housing heating costs. Much of this extreme cold has headed very far south where homes and infrastructure are not built to handle extreme cold. And especially what we saw in January this year was a large amount of what is called ice glaze accumulation. And that can lead not only to widespread damage to vegetation, but also cause power outages.
On the bright side, many people on the East Coast are getting to experience an abundance of snow that they haven't seen in quite a long time, especially East Coast ski resorts.
Well, whether you're thrilled about hitting the slopes, frustrated about your soaring heating bill, or just fed up with slipping on the ice, let us know. We've left a link in our show notes. And that's it for What's News for this Tuesday morning. Today's show was produced by Daniel Bach and Hattie Moyer. Our supervising producer is Sandra Kilhoff. And I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal.
We will be back tonight with a new show. Until then, thanks for listening.
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