
X CEO Linda Yaccarino departs; UCSF Health stays with Blue Shield
And now on to the day's top headlines here in the city and across the Bay Area.
GET TO KNOW YOUR CITY
Find Local Events Near You
Connect with a community of local professionals.
Explore All Events
Blue Shield and UCSF Health reach new agreement
Blue Shield of California and UC Health announced on Tuesday they have reached a new agreement whereby UC Health will extend contracts pending the completion of formal contract renewal process. The move means that Blue Shield members can continue to access UC Health providers and UC Health providers will accept Blue Shield members as in-network. Blue Shield of California and UC Health had been in ongoing contract negotiations with a potential agreement expiration date of Aug. 9, which could have pushed UCSF Health out of network for Blue Shield members.
UCSF renews big Mission Bay lease
UCSF has secured a 147,000-square-foot lease renewal in Mission Bay's Alexandria Center at 499 Illinois St., the Registry reports. The transaction ranks among the quarter's most significant leases, according to a second-quarter 2025 market report by Newmark, alongside new deals from Coinbase's 150,671 square feet of space and LinkedIn's separate renewal of 150,000 square feet.
Tri Counties Bank plans West Portal branch with familiar faces
Tri Counties Bank is opening a new branch in San Francisco's West Portal neighborhood this summer. The branch is the former site of a First Republic Bank branch and will be led by former First Republic Bank employees. 'Our focus is to provide West Portal with a superior banking experience through personalized service and a full range of strategic financial solutions," Scott Robertson, senior vice president and head of community banking at Tri Counties Bank, said in a statement. Instead of traditional teller lines, the West Portal branch will feature five "relationship desks" where customers can sit down with a banker.
Cruise lays off 100 workers
San Francisco-based robotaxi company Cruise has announced 101 layoffs in the Bay Area, according to state WARN filings, as part of a broader restructuring to scale back its General Motors-backed operations. The lion's share of the layoffs — 85 of them — come at 1201 Bryant St. in San Francisco. An office at 840 W. California Ave. in Sunnyvale would also be affected. The job cuts are effective immediately.
Sign up for the Business Times' free morning and afternoon daily newsletters to receive the latest business news driving change in San Francisco. Download the free San Francisco Business Times app for breaking news alerts on your phone.
M&A Watch
Meta (Nasdaq: META) is taking a 3% stake in Ray-Ban maker EssilorLuxottica for $3.5 billion in an effort to develop AI-powered smart glasses, Bloomberg reports. The market for smart glasses is expected to grow to $8.26 billion by 2030 from $1.93 billion in 2024, according to GrandView Research.
People on the Move
HTEC, a global digital engineering and product development company based in Palo Alto, has named Tim Sears as chief AI officer.
Funding Watch
South San Francisco-based Centivax has raised $45 million in Series A funding to advance its universal flu vaccine into human trials within eight months. Investors include Future Ventures, NFX, BOLD Capital, Amplify Partners, Kendall Capital and Base4 Capital. Funds will support clinical trials and enlarging a pipeline of vaccines.
S.F.-based edtech Honor Education raised $38 million in Series A funding from Alpha Edison, Wasserstein & Co, Audeo Ventures, Interlock Partners and New Wave Capital.
Palo Alto-based Sundial raised $16 million in Series A funding led by GreatPoint Ventures.
Final thought …
How about those Giants? If you didn't watch the final moment of last night's game against the Phillies, it's worth a look — especially with the help of announcer Dave Flemming's call. Meanwhile at the Business Times, don't forget to mark you calendar for our first Business of Sports event July 15 from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. at the United Club inside Chase Center.
DOWNLOAD the free SFBT app for breaking news alerts on your phone.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Elon Musk Is Compared to a Dictator in Luca Guadagnino's New Movie
New details about Luca Guadagnino's Artificial movie, including what role will play in the film, have been revealed. It was announced last month that Guadagnino will direct a movie about OpenAI for Amazon MGM Studios. The film will revolve around the period at the artificial intelligence company in 2023 that saw CEO Sam Altman fired and rehired in a handful of days. The cast of the movie includes Andrew Garfield, Monica Barbaro, and Yura Borisov. According to Puck, Elon Musk's role as an 'early OpenAI investor turned bitter rival' is explored in the film, though it is not yet clear who will play him. 'He's a minor character, especially after he tries to merge OpenAI into Tesla and then pulls his investment when he's rebuffed,' the article notes. 'But Elon, as famous for loving movies as he is for suing people, is probably not gonna like this portrayal — nor, likely, will his Grok chatbot (Unfortunately for Grok, there are no pro-Hitler references in the script). At one point, Murati says of Musk: 'Elon's not so bad, as far as dictators go.'' Puck also reports that Artificial, which was written by Simon Rich, centers more on Ilya Sutskever than it does on Altman. 'The film, which begins rehearsals next week in Italy, with a planned 2026 release, is actually the story of Ilya Sutskever, the idealistic and naive Israeli machine learning engineer (played by Anora breakout Yura Borisov) who co-founded the nonprofit. After several key breakthroughs, as depicted in the script, Sutskever is leveraged, marginalized, and ultimately betrayed by both his power-hungry friend Altman and the larger Silicon Valley community — with potentially disastrous consequences for all of humanity.' It is worth noting that Puck got this information after reading a 'recent draft' of the Artificial script; meaning there could still be edits that are made, given that the movie is not yet in production. The post Elon Musk Is Compared to a Dictator in Luca Guadagnino's New Movie appeared first on - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More.


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
Sorry, Elon. There's Already a Third Party and It's Called MAGA
Musk wants to start a new political party. President Trump realized it was easier to take over an existing party and mold it to his image. Save Elon Musk just can't seem to make up his mind. Either he has 'done enough' when it comes to political spending and will focus on his businesses or he will spend more money to start a new political party to take on the 'uniparty.'


CNBC
2 hours ago
- CNBC
Tesla supplier CATL has potential beyond just batteries, analysts say
For Tesla supplier Contemporary Amperex Technology , selling battery packs to major electric companies is just the start of its ambitions. "We believe the company is not just a hardware manufacturer, but it will also be a software ecosystem provider," Morgan Stanley analysts led by Jack Lu said in a report Wednesday. They pointed to CATL's artificial intelligence-powered tools for monitoring batteries on the road and giving early safety warnings. "As AI develops, the ecosystem will likely further evolve and provide more value added soft services to customers," the Morgan Stanley analysts said, noting that improved safety will also strengthen CATL's business partnerships and competitiveness. Morgan Stanley raised its price target on CATL's Hong Kong-listed shares to 445 Hong Kong dollars ($56.69), up 14% from 390 HKD previously. The new price target is nearly 18% above where CATL closed Friday, after reaching an intraday high of 395 HKD on Thursday. That was the highest since CATL shares listed in Hong Kong on May 20 in the world's biggest IPO of 2025. The company's mainland-listed shares have traded at an abnormally large discount to the Hong Kong shares. CATL also looks to be a step closer to generating revenue from licensing. Ford agreement U.S. automaker Ford has planned to open a battery factory through a licensing agreement with CATL. But the deal came under intense U.S. scrutiny , while there were concerns that Ford would lose advanced manufacturing tax credits. But Ford in the last week said it expects its BlueOval Battery Park in Michigan will benefit from such tax credits, and " remains on track to begin production of lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries in 2026." While the release did not mention CATL, analysts were hopeful. "This recent news is positive in that it appears there is tacit acceptance of the licensing arrangement," Macquarie analysts Eugene Hsiao and Fergus Kwan said in a report Wednesday, noting the development "helps to remove one key headwind on the shares." Neither CATL nor Ford immediately responded to a CNBC request for comment. CATL could receive 1.3 billion yuan ($181 million) in annual licensing fees if BlueOval operates near full capacity by 2027, although the battery company's profits won't likely benefit until then, the Macquarie analysts said. They have a price target of 360 HKD on CATL shares. U.S. scrutiny But CATL remains under broader scrutiny in the U.S. Earlier this year, the Pentagon added CATL to a "Chinese military" list that prohibits the U.S. Department of Defense from buying the company's products starting in 2026. CATL at the time said the designation was "a mistake" and that it "is not engaged in any military-related activities." "We believe geopolitical risk between China and the U.S. is already priced into the shares," the Macquarie analysts said. "Strong earnings fundamentals from market share gains in Europe, coinciding with increased shareholder returns, should lead to a valuation re-rating." CATL has pledged 90% of the funds raised by going public would support its expansion into Europe , especially a factory in Hungary that's nearing completion. The company last month also said a subsidiary has reached a deal in Indonesia for a $6 billion project that aims to cover nickel mining and processing, battery production and battery recycling. "We maintain our Buy rating for CATL," Bank of America analysts led by Ming Hsun Lee said in a July 2 report, "given its industry-leading battery technology and new product strategy to protect its market share, as well as its edge in technology and scale to drive more room for cost savings and sustained high" gross profit margins. The analysts have a 400 HKD price target on the stock. They highlighted that, in CATL's main line of business, Xiaomi will use the CATL's battery in its popular YU7 SUV, "which should be positive to CATL's [market] share in China." CATL has also built business partnerships in new technologies around battery swapping and packs designed specifically for hybrid-powered cars . Geely -backed electric car company Zeekr on Wednesday announced its hybrid driving system is based on CATL's "Freevoy Super Hybrid Battery." The technology will be used in Zeekr's first hybrid vehicle, the 9X SUV, which has a range of 380 kilometers on a single charge and is set to begin deliveries in China by the end of September, a statement said. — CNBC's Michael Bloom contributed to this report.