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  • What it feels like to visit a fusion company lab on a day when wildfire smoke cloaks the horizon

    What it feels like to visit a fusion company lab on a day when wildfire smoke cloaks the horizon

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    Cat Clifford, CNBC climate tech and innovation reporter, at Helion Energy on October 20.

    Photo taken by Jessie Barton, communications for Helion Energy, with Cat Clifford’s camera.

    On Thursday, October 20, I took a reporting trip to Everett, Wash., to visit Helion Energy, a fusion startup that has raised raised nearly $600 million from a slew of relatively well known Silicon Valley investors, including Peter Thiel and Sam Altman. It’s got another $1.7 billion in commitments if it hits certain performance targets.

    Because nuclear fusion has the potential to make limitless quantities of clean energy without generating any long-lasting nuclear waste, it’s often called the “holy grail” of clean energy. The holy grail remains elusive, however, because recreating fusion on earth in a way that generates more energy that is required to ignite the reaction and can be sustained for an extended period of time has so far remained unattainable. If we could only manage to commercialize fusion here on earth and at scale, all our energy woes would be solved, fusion proponents say. 

    Fusion has also been on the horizon for decades, just out of reach, seemingly firmly entrenched in a techno-utopia that exists only in science fiction fantasy novels.

    David Kirtley (left), a co-founder and the CEO at Helion, and Chris Pihl, a co-founder and the chief technology officer at Helion.

    Photo courtesy Cat Clifford, CNBC.

    But visiting Helion Energy’s enormous workspace and lab pulled the idea of fusion out of the completely fantastical and into the potentially real for me. Of course, “potentially real” doesn’t mean that fusion will be a commercially viable energy source powering your home and my computer next year. But it no longer feels like flying a spaceship to Pluto.

    As I walked through the massive Helion Energy buildings in Everett, one fully operational and one still under construction, I was struck by how workaday everything looked. Construction equipment, machinery, power cords, workbenches, and countless spaceship-looking component parts are everywhere. Plans are being executed. Wildly foreign-looking machines are being constructed and tested.

    The Helion Energy building under construction to house their next generation fusion machine. The smokey atmosphere is visible.

    Photo courtesy Cat Clifford, CNBC.

    For the employees of Helion Energy, building a fusion device is their job. Going to the office every day means putting part A into Part B and into part C, fiddling with those parts, testing them, and then putting them with more parts, testing those, taking those parts apart maybe when something doesn’t work right, and then putting it back together again until it does. And then moving to Part D and Part E.

    The date of my visit is relevant to this story, too, because it added a second layer of strange-becomes-real to my reporting trip. 

    On October 20, the Seattle Everett region was blanketed in dangerous levels of wildfire smoke. The air quality index for Everett was 254, making it the worst air quality in the world at that time, according to IQAir.

    Helion Energy’s building under construction to house the seventh generation fusion machine on a day when wildfire smoke was not restricting visibility.

    Photo courtesy Helion Energy

    “Several wildfires burning in the north Cascades were fueled by warm, dry, and windy weather conditions. Easterly winds flared the fires as well as drove the resulting smoke westwards towards Everett and the Seattle region,” Christi Chester Schroeder, the Air Quality Science Manager at IQAir North America, told me.

    Global warming is helping to fuel those fires, Denise L. Mauzerall, a professor of environmental engineering and international affairs at Princeton, told me.

    “Climate change has contributed to the high temperatures and dry conditions that have prevailed in the Pacific Northwest this year,” Mauzerall said. “These weather conditions, exacerbated by climate change, have increased the likelihood and severity of the fires which are responsible for the extremely poor air quality.”

    It was so bad that Helion had told all of its employees to stay home for the first time ever. Management deemed it too dangerous to ask them to leave their houses.

    The circumstances of my visit set up an uncomfortable battle. On the one hand, I had a newfound sense of hope about the possibility of fusion energy. At same time, I was wrestling internally with a deep sense of dread about the state of the world.

    I wasn’t alone in feeling the weight of the moment. “It is very unusual,” Chris Pihl, a co-founder and the chief technology officer at Helion, said about the smoke.

    Pihl has worked on fusion for nearly two decades now. He’s seen it evolve from the realm of physicist academics to a field followed closely by reporters and collecting billions in investments. People working on fusion have become the cool kids, the underdog heroes. As we collectively blow past any realistic hope of staying within the targeted 1.5 degrees of warming and as global energy demand continues to rise, fusion is the home run that sometimes feels like the only solution.

    “It’s less of a academic pursuit, an  altruistic pursuit, and it’s turning into more of a survival game at this point I think, with the way things are going,” Pihl told me, as we sat in the empty Helion offices looking out at a wall of gray smoke. “So it’s necessary. And I am glad it is getting attention.”

    How Helion’s technology works

    CEO and co-founder David Kirtley walked me around the vast lab space where Helion is working on constructing components for its seventh-generation system, Polaris. Each generation has proven out some combination of the physics and engineering that is needed to bring Helion’s specific approach to fusion to fruition. The sixth-generation prototype, Trenta, was completed in 2020 and proved able to reach 100 million degrees Celsius, a key milestone for proving out Helion’s approach.

    Polaris is meant to prove, among other things, that it can achieve net electricity — that is, to generate more than it consumes — and it’s already begun designing its eighth generation system, which will be its first commercial grade system. The goal is to demonstrate Helion can make electricity from fusion by 2024 and to have power on the grid by the end of the decade, Kirtley told me.

    Cat Clifford, CNBC climate tech and innovation reporter, at Helion Energy on October 20. Polaris, Helion’s seventh prototype, will be housed here.

    Photo taken by Jessie Barton, communications for Helion Energy, with Cat Clifford’s camera.

    Some of the feasibility of getting fusion energy to the electricity grid in the United States depends on factors Helion can’t control — establishing regulatory processes with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and licensing processes to get required grid interconnect approvals, a process which Kirtley has been told can range from a few years to as much as ten years. Because there are so many regulatory hurdles necessary to get fusion hooked into the grid, Kirtley said he expects their first paying customers are likely to be private customers, like technology companies that have power hungry data centers, for example. Working with utility companies will take longer.

    One part of the Polaris system that looks perhaps the most otherworldly for a non fusion expert (like me) the Polaris Injector Test, which is how the fuel for the fusion reactor will get into the device.

    Arguably the best-known fusion method involves a tokamak, a donut-shaped device that uses super powerful magnets to hold the plasma where the fusion reaction can occur. An international collaborative fusion project, called ITER (“the way” in Latin), is building a massive tokamak in Southern France to prove the viability of fusion.

    Helion is not building a tokamak. It is building a long narrow device called a Field Reversed Configuration, or FRC, and the next version will be about 60 feet long.

    The fuel is injected in short tiny bursts at both ends of the device and an electric current flowing in a loop confines the plasma. The magnets fire sequentially in pulses, sending the plasmas at both ends shooting towards each other at a velocity greater than one million miles per hour. The plasmas smash into each other in the central fusion chamber where they merge to become a superhot dense plasma that reaches 100 million degrees Celsius. This is where fusion occurs, generating new energy. The magnetic coils that facilitate the plasma compression also recover the energy that is generated. Some of that energy is recycled and used to recharge the capacitors that originally powered the reaction. The additional extra energy is electricity that can be used.  

    This is the Polaris Injector Test, where Helion Energy is building a component piece of the seventh generation fusion machine. There will be one of these on each side of the fusion device and this is where the fuel will get into the machine.

    Photo courtesy Cat Clifford, CNBC.

    Kirtley compares the pulsing of their fusion machine to a piston.

    “You compress your fuel, it burns very hot and very intensely, but only for a little bit. And the amount of heat released in that little pulse is more than a large bonfire that’s on all the time,” he told me. “And because it’s a pulse, because it’s just one little high intensity pulse, you can make those engines much more compact, much smaller,” which is important for keeping costs down.

    The idea is actually not new. It was theorized in the 1950s and 60s, Kirtley said. But it was not possible to execute until modern transistors and semiconductors were developed. Both Pihl and Kirtley looked at fusion earlier in their careers and weren’t convinced it was economically viable until they came to this FRC design. 

    Another moat to cross: This design does use a fuel that is very rare. The fuel for Helion’s approach is deuterium, an isotope of hydrogen that is fairly easy to find, and helium three, which is a very rare type of helium with one extra neutron.

    “We used to have to say that you had to go into outer space to get helium three because it was so rare,” Kritley said. To enable their fusion machine to be scaled up, Helion is also developing a way to make helium three with fusion.

    A dose of hope

    There is no question that Helion has a lot of steps and processes and regulatory hurdles before it can bring unlimited clean energy to the world, as it aims to do. But the way it feels to walk around an enormous wide-open lab facility — with some of the largest ceiling fans I have ever seen — it seems possible in a way that I hadn’t ever felt before. Walking back out into the smoke that day, I was so grateful to have that dose of hope.

    But most people were not touring the Helion Energy lab on that day. Most people were sitting stuck inside, or putting themselves at risk outside, unable to see the horizon, unable to see a future where building a fusion machine is a job that is being executed like a mechanic working in a garage. I asked Kirtley about the battling feeling I had of despair at the smoke and hope at the fusion parts being assembled.

    “The cognitive dissonance of sometimes what we see out in the world, and what we get to build here is pretty extreme,” Kirtley said.

    “Twenty years ago, we were less optimistic about fusion.” But now, his eyes glow as he walks me around the lab. “I get very excited. I get very — you can tell — I get very energized.”

    Other young scientists are also excited about fusion too. At the beginning of the week when I visited, Kirtley was at the American Physics Society Department of Plasma Physics conference giving a talk.

    “At the end of my talk, I walked out and there were 30 or 40 people that came with me, and in the hallway, we just talked for an hour and a half about the industry,” he said. “The excitement was huge. And a lot of it was with younger engineers and scientists that are either grad students or postdocs, or in the first 10 years of their career, that are really excited about what private industry is doing.”

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  • Supreme Court again declines to block Biden’s student loan relief plan

    Supreme Court again declines to block Biden’s student loan relief plan

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    Supreme Court nominee and U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Amy Coney Barrett on Capitol Hill in Washington, October 21, 2020.

    Ken Cedeno | Reuters

    The Supreme Court on Friday rejected a second request to block the Biden administration’s student loan debt relief program.

    Justice Amy Coney Barrett denied an emergency application to block the program brought Tuesday by the Pacific Legal Foundation, a conservative legal group, on behalf of two borrowers in Indiana.

    On Oct. 20, Barrett rejected a similar request from the Brown County Taxpayers Association in Wisconsin.

    Barrett is responsible for such applications issued from cases in the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which includes Indiana and Wisconsin.

    Friday’s decision has little practical effect. For now, student loan forgiveness remains on hold from a challenge brought by six Republican-led states. An appeals court judge in the 8th Circuit in October granted the states’ emergency petition to stay the plan pending consideration of the states’ appeal.

    More from Personal Finance:
    Treasury announces new Series I bond rate of 6.89%
    Education Department to reduce ‘red tape’ on public service loan forgiveness
    26 million borrowers have applied for student loan forgiveness

    Since the White House in August unveiled its plan — to cancel $10,000 in student loans for most borrowers and up to $20,000 for those who received Pell Grants for low-income families — it has faced at least six lawsuits.

    Close to 26 million Americans have already applied for student loan forgiveness, and the Biden administration has approved 16 million of the requests, the White House said Thursday. The administration has continued to encourage borrowers to apply for relief despite the recent challenges.

    Caleb Kruckenberg, an attorney at Pacific Legal Foundation, in an emailed statement said, “We’re disappointed by today’s denial but will continue to fight this program in court.”

    “Practically since this program was announced, the administration has sought to avoid judicial scrutiny,” Kruckenberg said. “Thus far they have succeeded. But that does not change the fact that this program is illegal from stem to stern.”

    ‘Standing’ remains an issue for forgiveness challenges

    The main obstacle for those hoping to foil the president’s action has been finding a plaintiff who can prove they’ve been harmed by the policy, experts say.

    “Such injury is needed to establish what courts call ‘standing,’” Laurence Tribe, a Harvard law professor, recently told CNBC. “No individual or business or state is demonstrably injured the way private lenders would have been if, for instance, their loans to students had been canceled.”

    In that light, Barrett’s decision to reject the Pacific Legal Foundation’s request isn’t surprising, said higher education expert Mark Kantrowitz.

    “There were very few substantive differences between their original lawsuit and the new lawsuit, which spells a lack of legal standing,” he said.

    In the Pacific Legal Foundation case, Indiana-based plaintiffs Frank Garrison and Noel Johnson said that they would be financially harmed if some of their student debt was automatically forgiven because they would incur state taxes on that canceled debt.

    Indiana is one of several states that has said forgiveness would be taxable at the state level, and potentially the county level.

    Both Garrison and Johnson are lawyers; Garrison works for the Pacific Legal Foundation and Johnson for the Public Interest Legal Foundation. They are pursuing relief through the public service loan forgiveness program, which allows those who work for the government or specific nonprofits to get their debt canceled after 10 years, or 120 payments. PSLF forgiveness is not considered taxable income.

    After the initial lawsuit, the Education Department said that borrowers can opt out if they do not want to have their loans forgiven.

    Student loan borrowers ‘in limbo’

    As legal challenges mount, financial advisors say borrowers are left wondering where student loan forgiveness stands.

    “The interference of the courts is really troubling because people are looking for certainty with what’s happening with their student loans,” said Ethan Miller, a certified financial planner and founder of Planning for Progress in the Washington, D.C., area. Miller specializes in clients with student loans.

    “There was a plan that clearly outlined the steps,” he said. “And yet everyone’s been put in limbo.”

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  • Online real estate market risk exposure with JMP Securities’ Nick Jones

    Online real estate market risk exposure with JMP Securities’ Nick Jones

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    Nick Jones, equity research analyst at JMP securities, joins ‘Power Lunch’ to discuss Opendoor’s warning, the cash needed to navigate near term headwinds and forces needed to normalize the housing market.

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  • Jeff Bezos Former Housekeeper Sues Over Working Conditions

    Jeff Bezos Former Housekeeper Sues Over Working Conditions

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    Amazon‘s founder and current executive chairman, Jeff Bezos, is being sued by a former housekeeper who says she was forced to work up to 14 hours a day in poor conditions and faced racial discrimination, per Bloomberg.


    Axelle/Bauer-Griffin / Contributor I Getty Images

    Jeff Bezos and girlfriend Lauren Sanchez at the Baby2Baby 10-Year Gala.

    The complaint, which was filed in Seattle’s King County Superior Court this week, says that former housekeeper, Mercedes Wedaa, worked long hours and was not informed she was allowed to take rest breaks — and says there was no room to do so, anyway.

    During meals, she and her co-workers would eat in the laundry room, the complaint added. Wedaa also alleges that an employee in Bezos’s home “became aggressive and abusive” with her, and treated did not treat her the same as white staff.

    Harry Korrell, an attorney for Bezos and the other defendants — the suit was also filed against two companies that manage the Amazon founder’s residences — pushed back on the claims in an emailed statement to Entrepreneur.

    “We have investigated the claims, and they lack merit,” Korrell said.

    Wedaa started working with the Bezos family in September 2019, per the Associated Press, first as a solo housekeeper and then as a “house coordinator.”

    The suit claims, per the AP, that she and her co-workers had to jump through a window in the laundry room to get to a bathroom when the family was home — as they were not allowed to be around them, except while cleaning.

    “Because there was no readily accessible bathroom, Plaintiff and other housekeepers spend large parts of their day unable to use the toilet even though they needed to,” the complaint wrote and giving them urinary tract infections (UTIs). (A connection between holding urine and UTIs has not been completely confirmed.)

    Wedaa’s suit claimed she was fired because she was told she looked “unhappy.”

    Korrell said that Wedaa was “responsible for her own break and meal times, and there were several bathrooms and breakrooms available to her and other staff.”

    He also claimed that Wedaa only decided to file the suit after the company said it would not give her $9 million.

    “Given their backgrounds, the suggestion that Mr. Bezos, Ms. Sanchez, or Northwestern LLC discriminated against Ms. Wedaa based on her race or national origin is absurd,” the statement finished.

    One of Wedaa’s lawyers, Patrick Leo McGuigan of HKM Employment Attorneys, did not immediately respond to a request for comment but told the AP that she “has worked hard all her life, she is a very credible person and compelling evidence supports her claims.”

    Bezos has dealt with workplace complaints before, from enormous Amazon employee turnover to what former and current employees claimed was a “toxic” culture at his space company, Blue Origin.

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    Gabrielle Bienasz

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  • House hunting this weekend? There’s more out there now

    House hunting this weekend? There’s more out there now

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    A For Sale sign is posted in front of a property in Monterey Park, California on August 16, 2022.

    Frederic J. Brown | AFP | Getty Images

    After more than two years of a historically lean housing market, listings are starting to rise − and swiftly.

    Active inventory nationally jumped 33.5% in October from the same time last year, according to Realtor.com. That puts supply at the highest level in two years.

    It’s not that sellers are rushing into the market; newly listed homes dropped 16% from a year ago, and pending listings are down 30%. But supply is growing because the homes that are on the market aren’t selling as fast as they did just six months ago.

    The average number of days it takes to sell a home is now 51, up by six days compared with a year ago.

    “As the rapid runup in rates reshapes housing market dynamics this fall, both buyers and sellers are taking a step back to recalibrate their plans,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist at Realtor.com.

    Mortgage rates have climbed so high and so fast that home shoppers are rushing to the sidelines. Already, affordability was rough with home prices up more than 40% since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic. But with rates now more than twice what they were in January, at just over 7%, potential buyers are looking at a monthly payment that is nearly $1,000 higher than it would have been at the start of the year.

    Housing availability varies by city, depending on demand and affordability.

    In Phoenix, inventory jumped a striking 174% in October. The city saw a mad rush of buyers over the past two years as employees who could suddenly work from anywhere moved out of pricey markets in California. Now, sales in the city are down more than 30% from a year ago, according to Redfin. 

    Inventory is also up 167% in Raleigh, North Carolina, and up 145% in Nashville, Tennessee, markets that also saw an influx of buyers during the pandemic. Inventory is still down in Chicago, Milwaukee and Hartford, Connecticut, but those markets did not see the same surge in demand over the last two years.

    The slowdown in demand for homes has caused sellers to cut their prices. A full 20% of listings now on Realtor.com have had a price reduction − about twice the share as a year ago.

    Still, home prices are not exactly falling yet. The price gains from a year ago are, however, shrinking at the fastest pace on record, according to several surveys.

    And with prices still high, more buyers appear to be widening their searches. Just over 60% of listings views on Realtor.com in the third quarter of this year came from shoppers outside of a listing’s area. That’s up from 57% in the second quarter and 52% in the same quarter of 2021.

    “For buyers with the flexibility, relocating to a lower-priced market could help offset higher mortgage costs. There’s also a takeaway for sellers in these areas – on a well-priced home, you could still see strong interest from these out-of-towners,” added Hale.

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  • The unemployment rate for Black men fell in October, but so did labor force participation

    The unemployment rate for Black men fell in October, but so did labor force participation

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    A Now Hiring sign at a Dunkin’ restaurant on September 21, 2021 in Hallandale, Florida.

    Joe Raedle | Getty Images

    The unemployment rate for Black men ticked down in October while it rose for most other groups, but that may be because workers are dropping out of the labor force.

    The October nonfarm payrolls print showed that the U.S. economy added 261,000 jobs in the month and that the unemployment rate for all workers increased to 3.7% from 3.5%.

    For Black men, unemployment fell to 5.3% from 5.8% a month earlier on a seasonally adjusted basis. White unemployment rose to 3.2% overall up from 3.1% a month earlier.  

    “It went in the right direction for the wrong reasons,” said Bill Spriggs, an economics professor at Howard University and chief economist for the AFL-CIO.

    The wrong reasons

    The downward motion in unemployment for Black men is likely due to the labor force participation rate, which dipped slightly to 67.2% in October, just below the previous month’s reading of 68%.

    In addition, the employment-to-population ratio for Black men fell to 63.6% from 64.1% in September, which could indicate that workers have stopped looking for jobs, sending unemployment lower.

    Unemployment for Hispanic workers also jumped in October, outpacing the uptick for Black and white workers. It jumped to 4.2% from 3.8% in September.

    “It’s showing this continued frustration that workers of color are having in the labor market,” said Spriggs. Though overall there is strength in the labor market, “this is not the tight labor market where people can just walk in and get a job no matter who they are.”

    Overall Black unemployment ticked up led by Black women. In October, the unemployment rate for Black women jumped to 5.8% from 5.4% in September.

    “This is concerning because throughout both the pandemic and the economic recovery from the pandemic crisis, Black women have been lagging behind,” said Kate Bahn, director of economic policy and chief economist at the Washington Center for Equitable Growth, a non-profit

    On the brighter side, the employment to population ratio for Black women didn’t change, though labor market participation ticked up during the month. That could be a sign that more Black women are returning to the labor force and are looking for jobs but haven’t yet found employment, noted Valerie Wilson, director of the program on race, ethnicity and the economy at the Economic Policy Institute.

    “It doesn’t suggest that there’s a huge number of people losing jobs,” she said.

    Going forward

    Of course, one month of data does not make a trend, so it’s important to look at the longer-term picture for workers of color.

    Generally, the unemployment rate for workers of color has stepped down in recent months in-line with white counterparts, and labor force participation and the employment to population ratio have mostly held steady, said Wilson.

    Still, there may be cause for concern going forward depending on how the Federal Reserve reads the October report. The labor market has remained strong amid historic interest rate hikes meant to tame high inflation, and the central bank is poised to continue its path of raising rates.

    If the Fed goes too far and pushed the U.S. economy into a recession, that could have the worst impact on workers of color.

    “If we throw the economy into a recession, that impact at least historically is more likely to hit harder in communities of color,” said Wilson.

    — CNBC’s Gabriel Cortes contributed reporting.

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  • Elon Musk Begins Twitter Mass Layoffs, Offices Closed

    Elon Musk Begins Twitter Mass Layoffs, Offices Closed

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    Twitter layoffs have begun.

    The layoffs come a week after Elon Musk, the world’s richest man and CEO of companies including SpaceX and Tesla, purchased the social media company.

    Musk has already fired top executives including former CEO Parag Agrawal and has now moved to lay off about half of Twitter’s 7,500-person global workforce.

    Why Is Elon Musk Starting Mass Layoffs?

    There were numerous reports this week that said Musk would cut 75% of staff, but the new Twitter CEO denied the accounts. However, a Slack message circulated Wednesday implied 3,738 would be fired, about half of the company’s employees, the New York Times reported.

    According to the outlet, on Thursday, an employee wrote on Slack asking if the “Red Wedding” had started — and minutes later, Twitter sent out an email to all of its employees informing them that layoff notifications would begin Friday.

    “In an effort to place Twitter on a healthy path, we will go through the difficult process of reducing our global workforce on Friday,” the email said.

    The email further said that if you were laid off, workers would find out via their personal emails by 9 a.m. PST on Friday, and if they were still employed, would receive an email through their work accounts.

    “We acknowledge this is an incredibly challenging experience to go through, whether or not you are impacted,” the company email added.

    “It’s a break-up by text,” one employee affected by the layoffs told Insider.

    The removals reportedly started ahead of the 9 a.m. Friday email. People began to be locked out of their work accounts, which led many of them to assume they were on the list of people to cut.

    “By closer to 11 pm PT, more than 1,000 people at Twitter had lost their jobs, according to employees and messages seen by Insider,” the outlet wrote.

    Twitter employees said goodbye on Slack, and people hung around the company’s office on Thursday, having drinks, per the NYT.

    There are also questions as to whether the company followed the WARN ACT. In California’s version, employers are required to give notice 60 days before a “mass layoff.”

    As of Thursday, California’s Employment Development Department has not received the relevant notice from Musk, it told the NYT.

    A Twitter employee who said they were fired Tuesday filed a related class action lawsuit Thursday.

    Some people, however, are not sorry to see the back of the place. “I’m actually relieved,” a laid-off worker told Insider.

    Others are concerned about severance payments, especially if they are starting families imminently.

    It’s also clear it will be a different culture for those who remain. Per the Times, Twitter’s monthly “Days of Rest,” were removed from calendars. One employee Tweeted a picture of herself sleeping at the office.

    Twitter did not respond to a request for comment.

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    Gabrielle Bienasz

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  • U.S. payrolls surged by 261,000 in October, better than expected as hiring remains strong

    U.S. payrolls surged by 261,000 in October, better than expected as hiring remains strong

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    Job growth was stronger than expected in October despite Federal Reserve interest rate increases aimed at slowing what is still a strong labor market.

    Nonfarm payrolls grew by 261,000 for the month while the unemployment rate moved higher to 3.7%, the Labor Department reported Friday. Those payroll numbers were better than the Dow Jones estimate for 205,000 more jobs, but worse than the 3.5% estimate for the unemployment rate.

    Although the number was better than expected, it still marked the slowest pace of job gains since December 2020.

    Average hourly earnings grew 4.7% from a year ago and 0.4% for the month, indicating that wage growth is still likely to serve as a price pressure as worker pay is still well short of the rate of inflation. The yearly growth met expectations while the monthly gain was slightly ahead of the 0.3% estimate.

    Health care led job gains, adding 53,000 positions, while professional and technical services contributed 43,000, and manufacturing grew by 32,000.

    Leisure and hospitality also posted solid growth, up 35,000 jobs, though the pace of increases has slowed considerably from the gains posted in 2021. The group, which includes hotel, restaurant and bar jobs along with related sectors, is averaging gains of 78,000 a month this year, compared with 196,000 last year.

    Heading into the holiday shopping season, retail posted only a modest gain of 7,200 jobs. Wholesale trade added 15,000, while transportation and warehousing was up 8,000.

    The unemployment rate rose 0.2 percentage point even though the labor force participation rate declined by one-tenth of a point to 62.2%. An alternative measure of unemployment, which includes discouraged workers and those holding part-time jobs for economic reasons, also edged higher to 6.8%.

    Stock market futures rose following the nonfarm payrolls release, while Treasury yields also were higher.

    September’s jobs number was revised higher, to 315,000, an increase of 52,000 from the original estimate. August’s number moved lower by 23,000 to 292,000.

    The new figures come as the Fed is on a campaign to bring down inflation running at an annual rate of 8.2%, according to one government gauge. Earlier this week, the central bank approved its fourth consecutive 0.75 percentage point interest rate increase, taking benchmark borrowing rates to a range of 3.75%-4%.

    Those hikes are aimed in part at cooling a labor market where there are still nearly two jobs for every available unemployed worker. Even with the reduced pace, job growth has been well ahead of its pre-pandemic level, in which monthly payroll growth averaged 164,000 in 2019.

    But Tom Porcelli, chief U.S. economist at RBC Capital Markets, said the broader picture is of a slowly deteriorating labor market.

    “This thing doesn’t fall of a cliff. It’s a grind into a slower backdrop,” he said. “It works this way every time. So the fact that people want to hang their hat on this lagging indicator to determine where we are going is sort of laughable.”

    Indeed, there have been signs of cracks lately.

    Amazon on Thursday said it is pausing hiring for roles in its corporate workforce, an announcement that came after the online retail behemoth said it was halting new hires for its corporate retail jobs.

    Also, Apple said it will be freezing new hires except for research and development. Ride-hailing company Lyft reported it will be slicing 13% of its workforce, while online payments company Stripe said it is cutting 14% of its workers.

    Fed Chairman Jerome Powell on Wednesday characterized the labor market as “overheated” and said the current pace of wage gains is “well above” what would be consistent with the central bank’s 2% inflation target.

    “Demand is still strong,” said Amy Glaser, senior vice president of business operations at Adecco, a staffing and recruiting firm. “Everyone is anticipating at some point that we’ll start to see a shift in demand. But so far we’re continuing to see the labor market defying the law of supply and demand.”

    Glaser said demand is especially strong in warehousing, retail and hospitality, the sector hardest hit by the Covid pandemic.

    This is breaking news. Please check back here for updates.

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  • BITG says WeWork shares could nearly triple, citing ‘opportunity in uncertainty’

    BITG says WeWork shares could nearly triple, citing ‘opportunity in uncertainty’

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  • A showdown over climate reparations is brewing — and it will determine the success of the COP27 summit

    A showdown over climate reparations is brewing — and it will determine the success of the COP27 summit

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    “Looking at loss and damage as a side issue is not acceptable because this is the reality that millions are facing every single day,” said Harjeet Singh, head of global political strategy at Climate Action Network.

    Fida Hussain | Afp | Getty Images

    The success or failure of the U.N.’s flagship climate conference is likely to depend on getting wealthy countries to deliver on reparations — a highly divisive and emotive issue that is seen as a fundamental question of climate justice.

    The COP27 climate summit gets underway in Egypt from Nov. 6. The annual gathering of the U.N. Climate Change Conference will see more than 30,000 delegates convene in the Red Sea resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh to discuss collective action on the climate emergency.

    It comes amid growing calls for rich countries to compensate climate-vulnerable nations as it becomes harder for many people to live safely on a warming planet.

    Reparations, sometimes referred to as “loss and damage” payments, are likely to dominate proceedings at COP27, with diplomats from more than 130 countries expected to push for the creation of a dedicated loss and damage finance facility.

    They argue agreement on this issue is imperative as climate impacts become more severe.

    Rich countries, despite accounting for the bulk of historical greenhouse gas emissions, have long opposed the creation of a fund to address loss and damage. Many policymakers fear that accepting liability could trigger a wave of lawsuits by countries on the frontlines of the climate emergency.

    If we lose the agenda fight then we might as well come home and forget about the rest of COP because it will be useless in the face of what is happening in the world on climate change.

    Saleemul Huq

    Director of ICCCAD

    Saleemul Huq, director of the Bangladesh-based International Centre for Climate Change and Development, said he is expecting an “agenda fight” at the start of COP27 — the result of which he said will be critical to the summit’s integrity.

    Finance to address loss and damage is on the provisional agenda for the U.N. climate conference. However, policymakers will need to determine whether to adopt it onto the official agenda at the start of the summit.

    Huq, a pioneer of loss and damage research and advocacy, said it is feared that once again wealthy countries will refuse to endorse financial support for low- and middle-income countries acutely vulnerable to the climate crisis.

    U.S. climate envoy John Kerry said Washington would not be “obstructing” talks on loss and damage in Sharm el-Sheikh.

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    For instance, at COP26 last year, high-income nations blocked a proposal for a loss and damage financing body, choosing instead to engage in a new three-year dialogue for funding discussions. The so-called “Glasgow Dialogue” has been sharply criticized as a program without a clear plan or an intended outcome.

    Huq said during a webinar hosted by Carbon Brief that the battle to put loss and damage funding on the official agenda “is going to be the big fight coming up in Sharm el-Sheikh.”

    “If we lose the agenda fight then we might as well come home and forget about the rest of COP because it will be useless in the face of what is happening in the world on climate change,” Huq said.

    “It is beyond mitigation and adaptation now,” he added. “Loss and damage [funding] is by far the most important issue that needs to be discussed and if the UNFCCC doesn’t do it then it basically becomes redundant.”

    ‘The litmus test for the success of COP27’

    The push for loss and damage payments differs from climate finance directed toward mitigation and adaptation.

    Mitigation refers to efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions that are causing global heating by, for instance, transitioning from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources. Adaptation, meanwhile, means preparing for the adverse effects of the climate crisis by taking action to minimize the damage.

    These are two established pillars of climate action. Loss and damage funding, meanwhile, is recognized by many as the third pillar of international climate policy.

    Anglers fish on the River Sava in heavy smog conditions in Belgrade, Serbia, on Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2022. Smog spewing from ancient coal-fired power plants, outdated automobiles and heating systems running on burning tires and wood is choking the Balkans both literally and economically.

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Speaking two weeks ahead of COP27, U.S. climate envoy John Kerry said Washington would not be “obstructing” talks on loss and damage in Sharm el-Sheikh. His comments mean that, for the first time ever, the U.S. appears willing to discuss reparations at the U.N. climate conference.

    Kerry’s openness to talks on loss and damage funding marked an abrupt change in tone from just one month earlier. Speaking at a New York Times event on Sept. 20, Kerry suggested the U.S. would not be prepared to compensate countries for the loss and damage they’ve suffered as a result of the climate emergency.

    “You tell me the government in the world that has trillions of dollars — because that’s what it costs,” Kerry said. He added that he refused to feel “guilty” for the climate crisis.

    “There’s plenty of time to be arguing, pointing fingers, doing whatever,” Kerry said. “But the money we need right now needs to go to adaptation, it needs to go to building resilience, it needs to go to the technology that is going to save the planet.”

    A man inspects a devastated field in the village of Ramdaspur affected by Cyclone Sitrang in Bhola under Barishal, Division, Bangladesh on October 15, 2022.

    Anadolu Agency | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

    Advocates of loss and damage funding argue it is required to account for climate impacts — including hurricanes, floods and wildfires or slow-onset impacts such as rising sea levels — that countries cannot defend against because the risks are unavoidable or the countries cannot afford it.

    “This is the litmus test for the success of COP27,” said Harjeet Singh, head of global political strategy at Climate Action Network, which includes more than 1,500 civil society groups.

    “Looking at loss and damage as a side issue is not acceptable because this is the reality that millions are facing every single day,” Singh said during the same webinar event, citing devastating floods in Pakistan and severe droughts in the Horn of Africa.

    Singh said political mobilization over loss and damage funding makes COP27 the most important COP yet. “We now have to make sure it delivers climate justice that we have been demanding by creating a new system of funding so that we can support people who are facing the climate emergency now.”

    What is loss and damage?

    There is no internationally agreed definition for loss and damage, but it is broadly understood to refer to the economic impacts on livelihoods and property, and non-economic loss and damage, such as the loss of life and losses to biodiversity.

    “I think it means different things to different people, but broadly I would see the idea as funding to address the impacts of climate change that can’t be avoided through mitigation and adaptation,” Rachel James, a climate scientist at the University of Bristol, told CNBC via telephone.

    “That ties into why it is so important for climate justice because we don’t have a mechanism or funding to deal with that at the moment — and it’s too late to ignore it.”

    Why does it matter?

    “Loss and damage is happening every single day somewhere in the world — and it will continue to happen every single day from now on,” ICCCAD’s Huq said, citing the damage caused by Hurricane Ian in late September as a recent example.

    “Ian is the biggest storm Florida has had so far. But that’s not going to be true next year, they are going to have a bigger one next year and they are going to one even bigger than that the year after. So, we have now entered the era of impacts from human-induced climate change causing losses and damages.”

    “We need to deal with that — and we are not prepared to do it at all. Even the richest country in the world, the U.S., is not prepared for this,” he added.

    Paddy McCully, senior analyst at non-governmental organization Reclaim Finance, said that although loss and damage funding was highly likely to feature prominently at COP27, nobody is expecting substantial progress.

    “Given the geopolitical situation at the moment and the sharply different positions from the north and south on loss and damage, I think it is going to be hard for countries to achieve a dramatic breakthrough,” McCully told CNBC via telephone.

    “The sign of a successful COP will be that there is at least agreement on a mechanism for providing finance in loss and damage,” he said. “And I think that a moderately successful COP would be that it doesn’t all fall apart in north-south acrimony, and you have at least agreement on further talks on setting up a mechanism.”

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  • JPMorgan’s blockchain unit CEO says consumer protection needs to be a priority in digital asset projects

    JPMorgan’s blockchain unit CEO says consumer protection needs to be a priority in digital asset projects

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    GP: JPMorgan office

    S3studio | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    SINGAPORE — Banks have to prioritize consumer protection as they embark on digital asset experiments, said Umar Farooq, chief executive officer of JPMorgan’s blockchain unit Onyx.

    Many blockchain projects and other crypto protocols have the potential to make financial services more efficient, accessible and affordable. But without proper precautions, they could also expose customers to cybersecurity risks.

    In recent months, many crypto investors have been struck by hacks and scams. For example, crypto exchange Binance was hit by a $570 million hack in October and Deribit lost $28 million in a hot wallet hack this month.

    “What a bank needs to do from a regulatory point of view and customer’s point of view is that we need to protect our customers. We cannot lose their money,” Farooq said during a panel at the Singapore Fintech Festival 2022 on Wedneday.

    “I do think you need some sort of identity solution or know-your-customer solution which verifies who the human being that is interacting is and what they are allowed to do. Because without that, in the longer term, it just doesn’t work,” he added.

    Read more about tech and crypto from CNBC Pro

    Farooq explained that JPMorgan is using a solution called verifiable credentials that live in the customer’s blockchain wallet. When the customer goes to a protocol to trade, the protocol validates the credential.

    “I can’t foresee people being able to send money across borders if no one checks and no one knows who’s sending money to who, because sooner or later they will be in a money laundering incident,” said Farooq. 

    “So those are the very fundamental things that need to be addressed before you even get to systematic issues. Education, protection and identity need to be in place,” he added. 

    Project Guardian industry pilot

    Farooq and Onyx tackled some of these security and verification issues as part of Project Guardian, an industry pilot the Monetary Authority of Singapore announced in May.

    “It was very, very hard,” Farooq said.

    In the pilot, DBS Bank, JPMorgan and SBI Digital Asset Holdings conducted transactions in tokenized foreign exchange and government bonds. Tokenizing a financial asset involves converting its ownership rights into digital tokens. It allows financial transactions such as borrowing and lending to be performed autonomously on a blockchain without the need for intermediaries.

    “It was the first time we had tokenized deposits. I actually think it’s the first time any bank in the world has tokenized wallets on a public blockchain,” Farooq told CNBC in an interview.

    “Using public blockchain, we had to spend a lot of time thinking through identity. We did lots of audits of smart contracts because again — they were publicly visible. And finally, it was using a protocol to actually make it all happen. It’s a lot of managing the risks. All of these were firsts for us,” he said.

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  • An Underwater Property in Florida Is Going for $43 Million

    An Underwater Property in Florida Is Going for $43 Million

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    Four acres of beautiful waterfront land in Boca Raton, , is on the market for $43 million.

    There’s only one issue—it’s largely underwater.

    Image credit: William Swain via The Real Deal

    Giving new meaning to the term “underwater mortgage,” real estate manager William Swaim of Waterfront ICW Properties is offering the submerged land for developing single-family homes.

    Swaim calls the property a “unicorn” due to its location and relatively inexpensive price tag. The parcel sits along the Intracoastal Waterway, a series of inlets and canals that wealthy residents use to dock their boats and yachts. Home prices in the area have appreciated monthly by more than 10 percent over the past 18 months. A mansion can go for as much as $18 million a pop.

    Swaim, who specializes in buying and reselling flooded land, said the area is the “last and largest undeveloped Boca Raton Intracoastal property for sale in 30 years.”

    But he also warns that anyone buying the property will have their work cut out for them.

    “Submerged parcels are a headache,” Swaim told The Palm Beach Post. “It takes years to clean them up, and most people don’t want to take years to clean them up.”

    His company will build a seawall and fill the dirt for an additional $3.5 million.

    Why is the property underwater?

    Swaim’s land wasn’t always beneath the sea. The property was above ground until 1957, but an apparently greedy neighbor stole the dirt to build a nearby subdivision, Swaim told The Post.

    Some local activists are concerned that overdeveloping properties such as these can harm wildlife.

    “Manatees are dying at record rates because of impacts to their habitat, and increasing development on submerged lands is only going to compound that problem,” said Everglades Law Center Executive Director Lisa Interlandi.

    But a 2018 Army Corps review concluded that developing the land would not adversely affect endangered and threatened sea turtles, smalltooth sawfish, or manatees.

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    Jonathan Small

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  • Magic mushroom compound psilocybin can help treat depression, study finds

    Magic mushroom compound psilocybin can help treat depression, study finds

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    The naturally occurring psychedelic compound psilocybin can significantly reduce symptoms of depression, according to data from the largest trial of its type ever conducted.

    David Buzzard – media-centre.ca / Getty Images

    LONDON — The naturally occurring psychedelic compound psilocybin can significantly reduce symptoms of depression, according to data from the largest trial of its type ever conducted.

    Psilocybin was given to 233 patients who had already tried at least two antidepressants in the past with little success, suggesting the compound could have huge benefits for those suffering with hard-to-treat depression.

    After receiving the psilocybin, patients entered a “walking dream-like” state for between four and six hours and then left the clinic once they had returned to their normal state.

    The trial found that a 25mg dose of psilocybin, given alongside psychological support, triggered a reduction in levels of depression three weeks after treatment.

    The study, published Thursday in the New England Journal of Medicine, was carried out internationally by London-based COMPASS Pathways.

    Around 100 million people worldwide suffer with depression that is resistant to treatment, and so the findings of the study are a step in the right direction, according to James Rucker, consultant psychiatrist and senior clinical lecturer at King’s College London, who was involved in the study.

    “Our task now is to investigate psilocybin for treatment-resistant depression in larger trials with more participants, comparing it both to placebo and to established treatments,” Rucker said, according to a King’s College London press release

    The drugs were trialed in doses of 1mg, 10mg and 25mg and adverse effects recorded across all groups included headaches, nausea and thoughts around suicide.

    There was not, however, an equal number of “severely depressed” participants in each dosage group, according to Ravi Das, an associate professor at the University College London Institute of Mental Health, which “does not appear to be acknowledged in the paper,” as reported by Reuters.

    Critics have also expressed concern that this could lead to a rise in usage of magic mushrooms in non-pharmaceutical settings.

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  • Paypal drops on light revenue forecast for Q4

    Paypal drops on light revenue forecast for Q4

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    The PayPal logo displayed on a smartphone screen with a stock market graphic in the background.

    Omar Marques | SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images

    PayPal shares fell more than 5% in after-hours trading, despite beating earnings and revenue expectations for the third quarter, as the company’s Q4 revenue estimate came in behind analysts’ expectations.

    Here’s what PayPal reported:

    • Earnings per share (EPS): $1.08 per share, ex-items, vs. 96 cents expected, according to a Refinitiv survey of analysts
    • Revenue: $6.85 billion, vs. $6.82 billion expected, according to Refinitiv

    The company estimated Q4 revenues to come in at $7.38 billion, which is less than the $7.74 billion consensus expectations, according to analysts surveyed by Refinitiv

    PayPal raised EPS guidance for the full fiscal year, saying it’s benefited from “ongoing productivity initiatives.” It expects to add 8 to 10 million net new active users in the fiscal year.

    The company said it’s working with Apple to enhance its offerings for PayPal and Venmo, including by letting U.S. merchant customers accept contactless payments through their mobile wallets and adding PayPal and Venmo network-branded credit and debit cards to the Apple Wallet.

    WATCH: Consumer watchdog agency investigating fintech apps after PayPal reverses controversial user policy

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  • Apple Is Now Valued More Than Alphabet, Amazon and Meta Combined

    Apple Is Now Valued More Than Alphabet, Amazon and Meta Combined

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    • Apple’s market value is now higher than that of Alphabet, Amazon and Meta combined.
    • The iPhone maker’s worth stands at $2.307 trillion, while its tech peers add up to $2.306 trillion.
    • Tech stocks have suffered after posting poor quarterly earnings, but Apple dodged a wipeout.

    This story was originally published on Business Insider.


    Loren Elliott/Reuters via Business Insider

    Apple’s market cap was $2.307 trillion at Wednesday’s close.

    Apple is now worth more than fellow tech giants Alphabet, Amazon and Meta combined, after it ended trading Wednesday with a market value of $2.307 trillion.

    At the same time, the market caps of its three tech giant peers added up to $2.306 trillion at the close of trading Wednesday. Google parent Alphabet’s market cap stood at $1.126 trillion, Amazon’s at $939.78 billion and Facebook parent Meta’s at $240.07 billion, Yahoo Finance data showed.

    Overall, Big Tech stocks suffered a brutal selloff last week on the back of disappointing quarterly earnings. But Apple’s stock has outperformed its peers after it beat Wall Street’s revenue and profit forecasts for its fourth quarter.

    The iPhone maker’s shares soared 8% in the wake of its results. After their earnings reports, Meta plunged more than 20%, Amazon fell about 10%, while Alphabet saw a single-digit decline.

    Alphabet, Amazon and Meta’s lackluster earnings signaled that demand for digital advertising is flagging. The poorly-received results have helped wipe billions off their market values as their shares fell, and pushed Amazon out of the trillion-dollar market cap club.

    Over the past five sessions, Apple’s stock has risen 0.16%, while Alphabet has fallen 5.7%, Amazon is down 17.0% and Meta has lost 7.6% over that period.

    Despite Apple’s achievement, its market cap has fallen back from its $2.193 trillion value at the end of 2021. A series of headwinds — high inflation, rising interest rates, fears of recession and the Ukraine war among them — have meant tech stocks have struggled in 2022 as investors lost appetite for higher risk assets.

    This story was amended to correct the market cap figure in the headline. Apple’s market value is $2.307 trillion, not $2.037 trillion.

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    Zahra Tayeb

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  • Cake Boss Pizza ATM Slammed on TikTok for ‘Dry’ $10 Slices

    Cake Boss Pizza ATM Slammed on TikTok for ‘Dry’ $10 Slices

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    Buddy Valastro may be the Cake Boss, but people aren’t convinced he’s much of a pizza entrepreneur.

    The baker, who garnered fame from his hit TLC show about his family-owned Carlo’s Bakery in Hoboken, New Jersey, has expanded beyond his home roots with several ventures including his Pizza Cake restaurant in Las Vegas, and most recently his new pizza vending machines in Sin City’s Linq Hotel.

    However, one Las Vegas blogger wasn’t impressed with the quality of the machine’s slice in a now-viral TikTok review of the product, which has since been viewed 450,600 times.

    @lasvegasblogger

    Big mistake in Las Vegas save your money! There are better pizzas in Las Vegas for way cheaper

    ♬ Technomancer – Jonathan Paulsen

    After showing viewers how to use the touchscreen machine, the blogger showed how the cheese pizza was “dry and thick.” She then proceeded to throw the pizza away after saying she was disappointed with the Cake Boss’s product.

    People echoed her sentiments in the comments, one writing, “I can buy a whole pizza for $6 at Little Ceasers and it looks better than that,” while another added confection humor, “It’s lacking in rice treat and fondant with modeling chocolate and pvc pipe so idk if you can call it a cake boss pizza.”

    The vending machines launched in October, according to Vital Vegas, offering customers 24/7 access to slices of cheese, pepperoni, and Italiano pizza for $9.95 – $10.95 for one and $19.95 for two.

    Each slice is kept refrigerated in the vending machine, which uses pizza heating technology called “TurboChef” to heat the slices in 2 to 3 minutes.

    Still, despite the poor TikTok review — and despite being “made” in an ATM — the pizza isn’t overly processed, according to Vital. The mozzarella is made by hand on-site at the nearby Boss Cafe by Valastro’s father-in-law Mauro Belgiovine before it’s then refrigerated and distributed from the machine.

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    Sam Silverman

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  • Tenbagger stocks that Wall Street believes can keep the big returns going

    Tenbagger stocks that Wall Street believes can keep the big returns going

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  • Former Pakistan PM Imran Khan shot and wounded at protest march

    Former Pakistan PM Imran Khan shot and wounded at protest march

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    Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan (R) addresses his supporters during an anti-government march towards capital Islamabad, demanding early elections, in Gujranwala on November 1, 2022.

    Arif Ali | AFP | Getty Images

    Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Imran Khan on Thursday was shot and wounded while leading a massive protest march in the country’s eastern city of Wazirabad.

    Mohammad Atif Khan, a close aide of the former PM and senior leader in his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, said Khan was shot in the leg and taken to hospital. Another PTI leader, Faisal Khan, was also injured, Atif Khan told NBC.

    He said that two armed men opened fire and were immediately taken into custody by police. He also said that one of the assailants was beaten by the mob and reportedly died, according to NBC. An as-yet-unknown number of Imran Khan’s supporters who were present at the rally were also reportedly injured.

    The PTI party called the shooting an “assassination attempt” in a tweet posted shortly after Khan was taken for treatment. Senior PTI member and former information minister Fawad Ahmed Chaudhry said in an impromptu speech following the shooting: “This is not only an assassination attempt on Imran Khan, but attack on Pakistan itself.”

    Within an hour of the shooting, videos were being shared on social media which appeared to show Khan standing up with one bandaged leg and waving to supporters, holding one fist in the air.

    Ousted Pakistan’s prime minister Imran Khan (C) waves at his party supporters during a rally in Islamabad on May 26, 2022.

    Aamir Qureshi | Afp | Getty Images

    The protest on Thursday was part of a week-long tour aimed at drumming up support for toppling the current government of opponent Shehbaz Sharif and forcing early elections.

    The 70-year-old Khan, a former cricket star who became Pakistan’s prime minister in 2018, was ousted from power in April of this year after a no-confidence vote by opposition lawmakers alleging corruption and unconstitutional actions, charges backed up by the country’s Supreme Court.

    In October, Pakistan’s election commission passed a ruling barring Khan from holding office again, sparking outrage among his many supporters who claim foul play.

    Khan and his supporters say his ousting was a conspiracy planned by current Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and the United States, the latter of which has a long and complicated relationship with the Pakistani government. Sharif and Washington deny the accusations.

    Floods, inflation and anger

    In the months since his removal from office, Khan has soared in popularity among Pakistanis, many of whom across the country of 225 million are struggling given rising inflation and living costs.

    Pakistan was plunged into greater turmoil after floods in June caused by abnormally heavy monsoon rains and melting glaciers engulfed some 30% of the country, killing nearly 2,000 people and potentially pushing as many as 9 million into poverty, according to the World Bank.

    Khan, the former cricket captain, is seen by many in and around Pakistan as something of a common man’s hero. He is openly critical of the United States — a major military aid provider — and Pakistan’s own powerful military, which has been responsible for leadership coups in the past.

    “For six months I have been witnessing a revolution taking over the country,” Khan wrote on Monday, describing the crowds of protesters supporting him. “Only question is will it be a soft one through the ballot box or a destructive one through bloodshed?”

    Khan’s legal troubles only seem to have made him more popular among his base, who believe he will make a comeback and become prime minister again in elections that would be held by next year. Some political analysts see him as a likely favorite as well, and many expect the charges against him to be dropped.

    Khan is one of the most famous figures in Pakistan and the wider South Asian region, known for leading Pakistan’s national cricket team to glory in the 1980s and 90s. He later transitioned to politics, founding the PTI in 1996.

    Khan’s political career was marked by losses until his party, running on a populist platform, won the most seats in Pakistan’s National Assembly in 2018 and he led the governing coalition as prime minister.

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  • Watch CNBC’s full interview with real estate billionaire Sam Zell on interest rates, inflation and more

    Watch CNBC’s full interview with real estate billionaire Sam Zell on interest rates, inflation and more

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    Sam Zell, Equity Group Investments founder and chairman, joins CNBC’s ‘Squawk Box’ to weigh in on the Federal Reserve’s move to combat inflation and breaks down his investment strategies amid high inflation. Zell also breaks down his outlook for the U.S. economy and explains why he believes the U.S. will likely face a recession. “The concept of transitory inflation is pretty awful,” Zell tells CNBC. “We over-flooded the society with capital.”

    16:08

    Thu, Nov 3 20228:57 AM EDT

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  • Turkey’s inflation tops 85% as Erdogan continues to rule out interest rate hikes

    Turkey’s inflation tops 85% as Erdogan continues to rule out interest rate hikes

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    Russians tourists to Europe decreased dramatically over the summer, but rose in several other destinations, including Turkey (here).

    Onur Dogman | Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

    Inflation in Turkey rose for the 17th consecutive month in October, hitting 85.5% year-on-year as food and energy prices continued to climb, according to official figures.

    Food prices were 99% higher than the same period last year, housing rose by 85% and transport was up 117%, the Turkish Statistical Institute reported Thursday.

    The domestic producer price index shows a 157.69% increase annually and was up 7.83% on a monthly basis. The monthly rise in consumer prices was 3.54%.

    The dramatic rise in living costs for the country of 85 million has continued unabated for nearly two years, in tandem with significant devaluation of Turkey’s currency, the lira.

    Controversially, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan refuses to raise interest rates, insisting that it would harm the economy. Economists and critics say his policies have continued to hurt the lira and push inflation up, fomenting a currency crisis.

    Turkey’s central bank on Oct. 20 slashed its key interest rate by 150 basis points for the third consecutive month of cuts, from 12% to 10.5% — despite Turkish inflation at more than 83% at the time.

    Erdogan says the cuts are pro-growth, and that they will continue. The president remains determined to get the country’s interest rate down to single digits by the end of this year.

    “My biggest battle is against interest. My biggest enemy is interest. We lowered the interest rate to 12%,” the president said during an event in late September. “Is that enough? It is not enough. This needs to come down further.”  

    Turkey’s central bank “will remain under pressure from President Erdogan for looser policy,” Liam Peach, senior emerging markets economist at London-based Capital Economics, wrote in an analyst note after the data was released.

    He added that “although the CBRT [Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey] said it will deliver one more 150bp interest rate cut at its meeting later this month, there is a risk of further easing beyond that, adding more downward pressure onto the lira.”

    The lira was trading roughly flat on the day at 18.61 to the dollar. It’s lost more than 28% of its value against the greenback year-to-date and nearly 50% in the last full year.

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