Jamie Dimon said that he and Elon Musk settled their differences. This seemingly concluded their row, sparked by a legal fight between JPMorgan and Tesla.
At current trends the charity Oxfam predicts up to five trillionaires are expected to emerge within the next decade.
"We actually no longer call it EV. We call it EIV. 'I' stands for intelligent," Pan Jian, a cochair of CATL, told a WEF panel in Davos, Switzerland.
Davos newsletter! For Gary Cohn, Davos 2025 must feel like déjà vu. “Even when I was there eight years ago, there was always a heavy debate on tariffs,” President Donald Trump’s former top economic adviser and the current vice chairman of IBM told Bloomberg TV.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk has been frequently spotted by Trump's side since the election and has lambasted Davos in the past. Screenshots of invitations for a black-tie reception Monday night cohosted ...
"Elon and I hugged it out," Dimon told CNBC in a TV interview at the World Economic Forum's annual event in Davos, Switzerland. "He came to one of our conferences, [and] he and I had a nice, long chat. We settled some of our differences."
A change in the H-1B visa policy for highly skilled professionals from India under Trump 2.0 would be "fantastic" for the US as it needs them, American economist Kenneth Rogoff told NDTV at the World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting in Davos.
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon and Tesla chief Elon Musk, once adversaries in a prolonged legal battle, have settled their differences, the banker told CNBC in an interview on Wednesday.
Trump's second presidency dominated proceedings at the World Economic Forum amid ominous warnings over the looming threat of trade tariffs and his decision to pull the United States out of the Paris climate agreement.
Dimon’s credibility with markets is rooted in his actions in advance of the 2008 recession: He noticed that underwriting standards on Wall Street were declining and instructed his firm to trim its exposure to subprime mortgages beginning in late 2006. That helped JPMorgan avoid the worst of the crisis.
Businesses worldwide and mainstream economists are fretting about higher prices as President Donald Trump unveils his tariff-heavy economic strategy. But Jamie Dimon, CEO of the world’s largest bank,
While addressing Trump supporters in Washington on Monday, the tech billionaire brought his hand to his chest and extended it straight out, twice, before saying: "My heart goes out to you." The gesture sparked controversy as it drew comparisons to a Nazi salute.