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Nigeria Naira Bonds Beat EM Peers Amid Reforms

Nigeria Naira Bonds Beat EM Peers Amid Reforms

Bloomberg5 days ago
Nigerian President Bola Tinubu's reforms are sparking the biggest bond rally in emerging markets, with naira-denominated bonds extending their 2025 rally. Tinubu's measures including eliminating fuel subsidies, a tax overhaul and boosting reserves have supported investor interest in the local market. Bloomberg TV's Jennifer Zabasajja reports. (Source: Bloomberg)
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I Asked ChatGPT How Long It Would Take for Jeff Bezos To Spend All His Money
I Asked ChatGPT How Long It Would Take for Jeff Bezos To Spend All His Money

Yahoo

time10 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

I Asked ChatGPT How Long It Would Take for Jeff Bezos To Spend All His Money

Jeff Bezos has an estimated net worth of $214 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. It's such an outrageous number that it doesn't feel real. Read More: Find Out: So naturally, I asked ChatGPT: How long would it take for Jeff Bezos to spend all his money? The answers were both enlightening and absurd. Wait, Isn't Most of His Wealth Tied Up in Stock? Yes, exactly. The majority of Bezos's fortune comes from Amazon stock and other assets, and not from piles of cash in a bank account. If he wanted to spend it all, he'd have to liquidate assets, deal with taxes, and probably move markets in the process. But for the sake of this thought experiment, I asked ChatGPT to treat Bezos' $250 billion as fully liquid. No taxes. No asset sales. Just pure, spendable wealth. Scenario 1: Spending $1,000 a Day 'If Bezos spent $1,000 every day, it would take him roughly 685,000 years to go broke,' ChatGPT calculated. That's longer than the entire existence of Homosapiens. He could buy a new iPhone every morning for the next 600,000 years and still have money left over for dinner. Discover More: Scenario 2: Spending $1 Million a Day Let's say he took it up a notch and started spending $1 million a day, luxury jets, gold-plated everything, villas on every continent. 'At that rate, it would take 685 years to run out,' ChatGPT said. That means he'd still be spending in the year 2710. Long after we've colonized Mars or uploaded our consciousness to the cloud. Scenario 3: Giving Away $1 Billion Per Year Now we're in philanthropic territory. If Bezos committed to giving away $1 billion every year, how long would that last? 'About 250 years,' ChatGPT said. To put that in perspective: The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation spent about $7 billion in 2022. Bezos could do that every year for two and a half centuries. Scenario 4: Giving It All Away Tomorrow Let's say Bezos liquidated everything and gave away $250 billion in one giant act of generosity. Here's what that could cover, according to ChatGPT: End world hunger for 7.5 years, based on UN World Food Programme estimates of $33 billion a year. Wipe out all U.S. out-of-pocket medical expenses for 2023, which totaled around $505 billion, according to Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Give every household in the U.S. a $1,750 check (based on ~143 million households). Pay for one year of tuition for 22 million public college students, based on national averages. That's real-world, tangible impact. And yet, he'd still likely make some of it back. So … Could Bezos Ever Go Broke? 'Not unless he really tried,' ChatGPT said. Even a billionaire-level spending spree encounters a bigger problem: Jeff Bezos' wealth continues to grow. In 2023, Amazon's stock surged about 80%, according to Investor's Business Daily, driven by renewed momentum in cloud, advertising, and AI. With most of Bezos's fortune tied to Amazon stock, that massive return added tens of billions to his net worth without him doing a thing. At that scale, wealth becomes self-sustaining, and it compounds. 'Let's say he spends $1 billion a year,' ChatGPT explained. 'Even that would be hard to keep up with. If his investments earned a modest 7% return annually, a pretty average stock market gain, he'd still come out ahead. On a $200 billion fortune, that's $14 billion in growth a year. So even after spending $1 billion, he'd be $13 billion richer.' In other words, he would be earning faster than he could spend it. So asking, 'Could Bezos ever spend it all?' overlooks the central fact: it's not just the size of his fortune, it's how fast it regenerates. More From GOBankingRates Mark Cuban Warns of 'Red Rural Recession' -- 4 States That Could Get Hit Hard Clever Ways To Save Money That Actually Work in 2025 7 Tax Loopholes the Rich Use To Pay Less and Build More Wealth This article originally appeared on I Asked ChatGPT How Long It Would Take for Jeff Bezos To Spend All His Money Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Apple reportedly has a 'stripped-down' AI chatbot to compete with ChatGPT in the works
Apple reportedly has a 'stripped-down' AI chatbot to compete with ChatGPT in the works

Engadget

time41 minutes ago

  • Engadget

Apple reportedly has a 'stripped-down' AI chatbot to compete with ChatGPT in the works

Apple has fallen far behind in the competitive market of AI-powered chatbots, but it may have a plan for an in-house option that aligns with the company's "not first, but best" philosophy. According to Bloomberg 's Mark Gurman, Apple created a team called "Answers, Knowledge and Information" earlier this year that's tasked with developing a "stripped-down rival to ChatGPT." Forming this team represents a major change in direction from Apple's earlier stance on artificial intelligence when the company partnered with OpenAI in 2024 to infuse Siri with ChatGPT instead of developing its own AI chatbot. Now, Gurman reported that this new Apple team will instead develop in-house AI services for a "new ChatGPT-like search experience" that can crawl the web to respond to questions. These new capabilities could be a standalone app, as well as support AI capabilities for Apple's Siri, Spotlight and Safari, according to Gurman's sources. The team is reportedly led by Robby Walker, who previously oversaw Siri, and has been advertising job openings that mention wanting experience with search algorithms and engine development. Beyond the Answers, Knowledge and Information team, Apple has experienced some growing pains when it comes to artificial intelligence. Earlier this year, the company said it would delay the release of the new-and-improved Siri, adding only that it would roll out "in the coming year." However, Apple is aware of the need to accelerate its Apple Intelligence program to stay competitive. In the latest third-quarter earnings call, the company's CEO Tim Cook said that Apple is open to acquisitions to fast-track its AI roadmap.

UN Lays Out Survival Plan as Trump Threatens to Slash Funding
UN Lays Out Survival Plan as Trump Threatens to Slash Funding

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

UN Lays Out Survival Plan as Trump Threatens to Slash Funding

(Bloomberg) -- Secretary General Antonio Guterres is slashing more than $700 million in spending and laying plans to overhaul the United Nations as its largest sponsor, the US, pulls back support. We Should All Be Biking Along the Beach Seeking Relief From Heat and Smog, Cities Follow the Wind Chicago Curbs Hiring, Travel to Tackle $1 Billion Budget Hole NYC Mayor Adams Gives Bally's Bronx Casino Plan a Second Chance Boston's Dumpsters Overflow as Trash-Strike Summer Drags On Guterres's plan calls for 20% cuts in expenditures and employment, which would bring its budget, now $3.7 billion, to the lowest since 2018. About 3,000 jobs would be cut. Officially, the reform program is pegged to the UN's 80th anniversary, not the new US administration. But the scale of the reductions reflects the threat to US support, which traditionally accounts for 22% of the organization's budget. President Donald Trump has suspended that funding and pulled out of several UN bodies already, with a broader review expected to lead to further cuts. 'We're not going to be part of organizations that pursue policies that hamper the United States,' Deputy State Department spokesman Tommy Pigott told reporters Thursday. The planned cuts at the UN come as the Trump administration has eliminated tens of billions of dollars in foreign aid as part of its drive to focus on what it sees as US interests. Conflicts from the Mideast to Ukraine and Africa have added to the need for global assistance. After years of financial struggles, the UN under Guterres already was planning to make sweeping structural changes. He warned in January it was facing 'a full-blown liquidity crisis.' Overall, spending across the UN system is expected to fall to the lowest level in about a decade - down as much as $20 billion from its high in 2023. 'UN 80 is in large part a reaction from the Secretary General to the kind of challenges posed by the second Trump administration,' said Eugene Chen, senior fellow at New York University's Center on International Cooperation. Guterres is expected to release details of his overhaul plans in a budget in September. The plan calls for restructuring many of its programs. Guterres controls the UN's regular budget, which is only a fraction of the total expenditures of its affiliates. Facing funding shortages of their own, agencies like UNICEF and UNESCO are also planning major cutbacks. The Trump administration already has stopped funds from going into the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, withdrawn from the UN Human Rights Council and left UNESCO. Guterres' plan has also drawn criticism, both from Trump allies and inside the UN. 'There are some things that the UN does that arguably should be increased in terms of resources,' said Brett Schaefer, a senior fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. 'And then there are some things that the UN shouldn't be decreasing but eliminating altogether.' He cited the UN's nuclear watchdog and the World Food Program as contributing significantly to US interests and singled out the Food and Agriculture Organization and Human Rights Council as having mandates at odds with American policy. Meanwhile, UN staff in Geneva announced last week they passed a motion of no confidence in Guterres and the plan. 'Staff felt its slash and burn approach lacked focus, had no strategic purpose, and was making the UN more top-heavy and bloated,' Ian Richards, president of the UN Staff Union in Geneva, posted on LinkedIn about the UN 80 report. That vote has largely symbolic importance, according to NYU's Chen. Still, Guterres' efforts to get ahead of the inevitable cuts that reductions in US support will bring could help the UN adapt, he added. 'Maybe that's a silver lining,' Chen said. 'We'll all be primed for reform.' --With assistance from Eric Martin. How Podcast-Obsessed Tech Investors Made a New Media Industry Everyone Loves to Hate Wind Power. Scotland Found a Way to Make It Pay Off Russia Builds a New Web Around Kremlin's Handpicked Super App Cage-Free Eggs Are Booming in the US, Despite Cost and Trump's Efforts What's Really Behind Those Rosy GDP Numbers? ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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