logo
Elon Musk's X to offer investment and trading in ‘super app' push

Elon Musk's X to offer investment and trading in ‘super app' push

Irish Times19-06-2025
X
chief executive
Linda Yaccarino
has said that users will 'soon' be able to make investments or trades on the social media platform, as she outlined a push into financial services in owner
Elon Musk's
quest to build an 'everything app'.
'You'll be able to come to X and be able to transact your whole financial life on the platform,' Yaccarino said in an interview at the Cannes Lions advertising festival. 'And that's whether I can pay you for the pizza that we shared last night or make an investment or a trade. So that's the future.'
She added that the company was also exploring the introduction of an X credit or debit card, which could come as soon as this year.
The proposed foray into financial services comes as Musk seeks to model the platform, which he bought in 2022, after China's WeChat – a one-stop shop for messaging, payments and shopping.
READ MORE
X has already said it will be introducing X Money, a digital wallet and peer-to-peer payment service, with Visa as its first partner later this year.
Yaccarino on Tuesday added that X Money would launch in the US first before being rolled out elsewhere, and said that the service would allow users to buy merchandise, store value or tip creators on the platform.
[
Labour Court to hear Musk's X appeal against WRC ruling
Opens in new window
]
'A whole commerce ecosystem and a financial ecosystem is going to emerge on the platform that does not exist today,' she said.
A big push into financial services would, however, open X up to burdensome regulatory challenges, such as compliance with licensing and money laundering regulations.
X has struggled to return to financial health after advertisers, which account for the majority of its revenues, left in droves following Musk's $44 billion (€38 billion) acquisition of the platform then known as Twitter. Many cited concerns about his hands-off approach to moderation, meaning their ads could be placed near objectionable content, as well as the billionaire entrepreneur's own provocative use of the platform.
Bobby Healy on why Manna drone delivery could be the 'biggest technology company in the world for its space'
Listen |
67:08
Tensions between X's leadership and advertisers have flared. In the interview, Ms Yaccarino pushed back against allegations that the social media company recently threatened brands with lawsuits if they failed to buy advertising on X.
She dismissed as 'hearsay' a Wall Street Journal report last week, which said that half a dozen brands, including Verizon and Ralph Lauren, had struck deals to buy ads after receiving the threats. 'It's unnamed sources, random third-party commenters,' Ms Yaccarino said.
[
Challenge by X to Irish media regulator's online safety rules set to begin this week
Opens in new window
]
+
X filed a federal antitrust lawsuit last summer against the Global Alliance for Responsible Media, a coalition of brands and ad agencies, as well as several other brands. The social media company accused the group of violating competition law by co-ordinating an 'illegal boycott' under the guise of an online safety initiative.
Over time, X has added or removed several brands from the complaint. It dropped Unilever from the lawsuit after it restarted advertising on the social media platform in October.
Ms Yaccarino said that 96 per cent of the company's advertising clients before acquisition had now come back to the platform, and that the company would reach its target of returning to its 2022 advertising levels 'super soon'.
Some advertisers and agencies at Cannes said that they were still cautious about running ads on X and sceptical that it would hit its targets in the near future – pointing to the toxicity of content on the platform.
Others had felt pressured to advertise, according to people familiar with the discussions, with one alleging that they were told to spend a specific amount or face a lawsuit. Mr Musk's close relationship with US President Donald Trump had made advertisers feel more anxious to comply with the demands, the person said.
Research firm Emarketer projects that X's revenue will increase to $2.3 billion this year, compared with $1.9 billion a year ago. However, global sales in 2022, when Musk took over, were $4.1 billion.
Ms Yaccarino also touted plans to bolster X's artificial intelligence capabilities after it was bought by xAI, Musk's artificial intelligence start-up, for $45 billion in March. She argued that the tie-up would help better deliver advertising against trending content in real time, adding that she now had 'double the amount of engineers' working to improve the platform. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2025
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Musk announces forming of ‘America Party' in further break from Trump
Musk announces forming of ‘America Party' in further break from Trump

Irish Times

time11 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Musk announces forming of ‘America Party' in further break from Trump

The dispute between US president Donald Trump and his main campaign financier Elon Musk took another fractious turn on Saturday when the space and automotive billionaire announced the formation of a new political party, saying Mr Trump's 'big, beautiful' tax bill would bankrupt the US. A day after asking his followers on his X platform whether a new US political party should be created, Mr Musk said in a post on Saturday that 'Today, the America Party is formed to give you back your freedom.' 'By a factor of 2 to 1, you want a new political party and you shall have it!' he wrote. The announcement from Mr Musk comes after Mr Trump signed his self-styled 'big, beautiful' tax-cut and spending bill into law on Friday , which Musk fiercely opposed. READ MORE [ Musk fumes as Trump tax bill cuts electric vehicle credits Opens in new window ] Mr Musk, who became the word's richest man thanks to his Tesla car company and his SpaceX satellite firm, spent hundreds of millions on Trump's re-election and led the Department of Government Efficiency from the start of the president's second term, aimed at slashing government spending. The first sign of investor dissatisfaction with Mr Musk's announcement followed later in the day. Investment firm Azoria Partners will postpone the listing of a Tesla exchange-traded fund, Azoria chief executive James Fishback said in a post on X. Mr Fishback is asking Tesla's board to clarify Mr Musk's political ambitions and said the new party undermines the confidence shareholders had that he would be focusing more on the company after leaving government service in May. Mr Musk said previously that he would start a new political party and spend money to unseat lawmakers who supported the bill. Mr Trump earlier this week threatened to cut off the billions of dollars in subsidies that Mr Musk's companies receive from the federal government. Republicans have expressed concern that Mr Musk's on-again, off-again feud with r MTrump could hurt their chances to protect their majority in the 2026 midterm congressional elections. Asked on X what was the one thing that made him go from loving Mr Trump to attacking him, Mr Musk said: 'Increasing the deficit from an already insane $2T [trillion] under Biden to $2.5T. This will bankrupt the country.' There was no immediate comment from Mr Trump or the White House on Musk's announcement. The feud with Mr Trump, often described as one between the world's richest man and the world's most powerful, has led to several precipitous falls in Tesla's share price. The stock soared after Mr Trump's November reelection and hit a high of more than $488 in December, before losing more than half of its value in April and closing last week out at $315.35. Despite Mr Musk's deep pockets, breaking the Republican-Democratic duopoly will be a tall order, given that it has dominated American political life for more than 160 years, while Mr Trump's approval ratings in polls in his second term have generally held firm above 40 per cent, despite often divisive policies. - Reuters

Apple's AI awakening lifts lagging shares
Apple's AI awakening lifts lagging shares

Irish Times

time14 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Apple's AI awakening lifts lagging shares

This year has been tough for Apple , but shares stirred to life after Bloomberg reported it may ditch its in-house AI model in favour of technology from OpenAI or Anthropic. That would mark a big shift for a company that prefers to build its core technologies itself. The stakes are high. Siri, once a marquee feature, now trails rivals. Gene Munster of Deepwater Asset Management, whose team tested Apple's revamped assistant, called it 'a voice-activated Google search' – fine for basics like calling a contact or checking the weather, but poor at reasoning or conversation. READ MORE Even when backed by ChatGPT, Siri was sluggish, with response times up to 20 seconds. ChatGPT voice, Munster said bluntly, 'feels like the future.' Apple's AI struggles are well-known and investors may want to leapfrog the problem by adopting a proven model. Still, outsourcing AI comes with strategic risks, says Munster. Rely too much on external models and Apple could lose control of future development – a tension already visible in Microsoft's ties to OpenAI. One alternative: buy Perplexity. The AI search start-up is model-agnostic and building a smart browser. Munster says it could boost Safari, hedge against Google Search, and give Apple more freedom to switch models. Wedbush's Dan Ives agrees, saying acquiring Perplexity would be a 'no-brainer'. Apple has made just three billion-dollar acquisitions. A Perplexity deal – likely over $14 billion – would mark a clear break from its cautious M&A playbook. Still, Apple spent over $100 billion on share buy-backs last year, so it can well afford to make a big AI statement. The question is whether it will.

US threatens EU with 17% tariff on food exports
US threatens EU with 17% tariff on food exports

Irish Times

timea day ago

  • Irish Times

US threatens EU with 17% tariff on food exports

The US has threatened to hit EU agricultural exports with 17 per cent tariffs in a twist to its trade conflict with Brussels, three people briefed on the discussions said. Such tariffs would hit everything from Kerrygold butter to Belgian chocolate and olive oil from the Continent, all of which are big sellers in the US. The eleventh-hour move, which EU officials characterised as an escalation of the transatlantic dispute, came ahead of a July 9th deadline to agree a deal between the two trading giants. US president Donald Trump imposed a 20 per cent 'reciprocal' tariff in April but reduced it to 10 per cent until July 9th to allow for talks. Until recent days, EU officials had been expecting that talks with the US would hold duties at the baseline rate. It was unclear if the 17 per cent on foodstuffs would be in addition to the other tariffs announced by Mr Trump or instead of them. Mr Trump has demanded that Brussels give American companies wide-ranging exemptions from regulations and cut its trade surplus with the US, but EU officials have rejected Washington's latest proposals on any such exemptions and food tariffs. [ Is Big Pharma lobby shielding Ireland from the worst of US tariffs? Opens in new window ] The EU is trying to secure its own carveouts for some products. One Brussels official said aircraft parts and spirits are among goods for which the bloc is seeking exclusions. They said that the two sides were working on a five-page draft 'agreement in principle', but this has very little agreed-upon text in it. Ursula von der Leyen , the European Commission president, said on Thursday that she hoped for an agreement in principle that would allow the sides to keep talking pending a final deal. However, Washington is pushing countries to agree binding deals by Mr Trump's deadline. Maroš Šefčovič, the EU trade commissioner, was warned of the proposed 17 per cent duties on agri-food on Thursday during meetings in Washington. The 27 member state ambassadors were informed on Friday. The value of EU agri-food exports to the US, including products such as wine, totalled €48 billion last year. Mr Šefčovič has repeatedly characterised the changing of EU regulations to suit the US as a red line. However, the EU is also on a deregulatory drive, weakening some environmental laws. EU countries are divided between accepting some higher tariffs in return for a period of certainty and those who wish to retaliate to put pressure on the US to compromise. Friedrich Merz, chancellor of Germany, the EU's biggest and most export-dependent economy, has been pressing the commission, which runs trade policy, to settle for a quick deal. He is anxious for exemptions from Mr Trump's sectoral tariffs of 25 per cent on vehicles and 50 per cent on steel. However, several ambassadors intervened in Friday's meeting to press for stronger action against Washington, said two people briefed on the meeting. Two EU diplomats said they had been told that the US had sketched out three scenarios for July 9th: Countries with an 'agreement in principle' would keep the 10 per cent tariffs, with possible further tariff relief at a later stage; for countries that failed to reach such an agreement, the tariffs would return to the level announced in April until a deal was struck; higher tariffs would be applied to countries that the US believes are not negotiating in good faith. As the EU prepares its possible retaliation for US duties on its products, member states have already approved counter-tariffs on €21 billion of annual US exports from July 14th. The commission is assembling a package of €95 billion more, including on aircraft and food. A commission representative said: 'The EU position has been clear from the outset: we favour a negotiated solution with the US, and this remains our priority ... At the same time, we are preparing for the possibility that no satisfactory agreement is reached.' The White House has yet to respond to a request for comment. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store