Iran · South Korea · Bitcoin · Fortune Technology
U.S. would only break Iranian ceasefire if there was ‘absolutely no alternative,’ says Deutsche Bank—this weekend was a
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A year ago, U.S. strikes against Iran would have had analysts running for the hills.
Key facts
- In fact, Jain said his $7.2 billion AI startup, Glean, is receiving thousands of job applications every day
- Elsie Peng at Goldman Sachs released her mid-year capex update early this morning, and it's good news for investors bullish on AI infrastructure spending
- Net net, optimism is still elevated that an agreement can be made to end the war,” chimed Deutsche Bank’s Jim Reid to clients this morning
- Despite the potential knock to negotiations, economists remained relatively sanguine this morning
Summary
No, they're not in the 1970s, says ING. S&P 500 futures are up 0.7%. In Europe, the Sto600 is down 0.28% in early trading and the U.K.’s FTSE 100 is up 0.76% before lunch. Bitcoin is at $77,089.