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Huracán Erick impactará costa de México con fuerza de categoría 3

Huracán Erick impactará costa de México con fuerza de categoría 3

Bloomberg18-06-2025
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BNB Rebounds to $780 After $520M Windtree Buy Commitment, Shows Signs of Stabilizing
BNB Rebounds to $780 After $520M Windtree Buy Commitment, Shows Signs of Stabilizing

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BNB Rebounds to $780 After $520M Windtree Buy Commitment, Shows Signs of Stabilizing

BNB rose around 0.6% in the last 24 hours, shaking off a recent drop to now trade close to $780. At its peak, the token reached $785.75, bouncing from a low of $761.22 during a stretch of high-volume trading. Much of the volume centered on a sharp correction, when BNB dropped from $774.52 to $761.34 on volume more than twice the daily average, according to CoinDesk Research's technical analysis model. That pullback, however, was short-lived. BNB's price traced a V-shaped recovery, ending near its high and well above the key $761 support zone. The rebound came after Windtree Therapeutics committed $520 million toward its planned BNB corporate treasury. The purchase represents one of the largest non-crypto institutional entries into a non-bitcoin token to date. Other companies, including Nano Labs, have also been betting on BNB, whose supply has been steadily dropping over Binance's and BNB Chain's token burns. Meanwhile, BNB Chain continues to grow its developer ecosystem. The platform announced the next cohort of its Most Valuable Builder accelerator, backing 15 early-stage startups working in AI, decentralized finance, and tokenized real-world assets. BNB is now showing signs of consolidation as it hovers around the $780 level, according to CoinDesk Research's technical analysis model. Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk's full AI Policy. 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

More AI is coming to Samsung phones, but from unexpected places
More AI is coming to Samsung phones, but from unexpected places

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More AI is coming to Samsung phones, but from unexpected places

Samsung was one of the first smartphone makers to go all-in with AI, thanks to the Galaxy AI stack. The Galaxy flagships didn't only ship the usual Gemini features, but also delivered their own unique AI experiences with tools like Now Bar, Now Brief, and Interpreter, among others. The company has no plans of stopping there. On the contrary, Samsung is eyeing deals with more AI companies to serve their AI tools atop Galaxy smartphones — at the cost of stealing some spotlight away from Google's Gemini. According to a report by Bloomberg, Perplexity and ChatGPT-maker OpenAI are two of those potential candidates. Why does this matter? 'We are talking to multiple vendors. As long as these AI agents are competitive and can provide the best user experiences, we are open to any AI agent out there,' Won-joon Choi, Chief Operating Officer (COO) of Samsung's MX Business, was quoted as saying. The shift is pretty interesting and something that is going to worry Google for multiple reasons. Recommended Videos As part of the Justice Department's antitrust case, it was reported that Google was paying an 'enormous' sum to Samsung. The fee was paid as a revenue share for onboarding paid subscribers, and also on a monthly basis for each Galaxy device that came pre-installed with the Gemini app. Interestingly, Samsung was also approached by other companies with similar offers, a list that includes names such as Meta, Microsoft, and OpenAI. How soon Samsung phones integrate AI products from other companies remains to be seen, but it would certainly be a big blow to Google. Over the past few years, Google executives have appeared on the launch stage for flagship Samsung devices. Moreover, as recently as its I/O event in May, Google heavily showcased Samsung's phones to reveal its upcoming Android and AI features. Samsung's status as the biggest name in the smartphone world is definitely a key part of the equation here. What's next for Google and Gemini? Google's Pixel phones are the best showcase of what AI (read: Gemini) can accomplish on a phone. But Google's smartphones are nowhere near as popular in terms of market reception and sales volumes are Samsung's Galaxy phones. That's why finding a prominent place for Gemini on Galaxy phones was such a big deal. But the challenge has already started right in the Android ecosystem. Perplexity, which offers a product that aims to compete with Google Search and Gemini, inked a deal with Nothing last year to offer its Pro subscription for free. Earlier this year, another deal with Motorola ensured that Perplexity would come pre-installed on Motorola devices. The company has also revealed that its AI-focused browser called Comet will soon land on Apple and Android smartphones. Perplexity was also rumored to be on Apple's potential list of partners as the company struggles to push Siri in the same league as ChatGPT and Gemini. As a stopgap solution, Apple inked a deal with OpenAI that allows Siri to seamlessly work with ChatGPT for advanced queries. With Samsung also exploring rival AI products for Galaxy smartphones, it would be interesting to see how aggressive Google gets at pushing Gemini on mobile devices.

Billionaire fund manager explains why so many missed the stock market rally
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Billionaire fund manager explains why so many missed the stock market rally

Billionaire fund manager explains why so many missed the stock market rally originally appeared on TheStreet. Stock market rally leaves many on sidelines after huge move Since President Trump paused most reciprocal tariffs on April 9, the stock market's gains have been eye-popping. Following a nausea-inspiring 19% drop from mid-February through early April, the S&P 500 has marched over 25% higher, setting new records in July. The gains likely have surprised many investors who were convinced that the economy was on the precipice of disaster, facing tariff-driven inflation and inevitable job situation, however, has proven far better than feared. So far, tariffs' impact on inflation has been muted, and the unemployment rate has stayed mostly flat. The potential for a better-than-hoped-for economy has left many on the sidelines, convinced that stocks will roll back to new lows. According to billionaire fund manager Ken Fisher, the thinking that led investors to sell stocks during the downturn may be deeply flawed. Fisher, the founder of Fisher Investments, a money manager with over $332 billion of assets under management, is worth a staggering $11.7 billion, good enough to rank 261st on Bloomberg's Billionaires Index. Fisher clearly knows a thing or two about making money in the market. This week, he explained, in one word, one of the biggest mistakes investors make in periods like this, while also offering a simple solution. Fisher Investments Ken Fisher sums up huge investor problem with blunt description Fisher has been investing professionally since founding Fisher Investments in 1979, so he knows a thing or two because he's seen a thing or two. His long career includes navigating the inflation-fueled early 1980s, Black Monday in 1987, the Savings & Loan Crisis, the Internet boom (and bust!), the Great Recession, Covid, and 2022's bear all those periods, he's noted one big mistake many investors make that slows their path to financial freedom, something he described recently with one word on "X" as "Breakevenitis." It's understandable to get nervous about portfolio values during market pullbacks, corrections, and bear markets. Retirement is expensive, and surging US debt creates a real risk that Social Security may not be able to keep pace with inflation in retirement, making the value of our investments in our retirement and personal accounts even more important. However, market drawdowns are common. Pullbacks of about 5% happen on average once per year, while 10% corrections occur every few years, according to Capital Group. Even 20% of bear markets are relatively frequent if you consider a 40-year career, happening about every six years. As a result, how investors react during these many sell-offs can significantly impact portfolio balances in your sixties, when retirement is knocking on the door. Fisher explains why 'breakevenitis' is so dangerous to investors Market sell-offs are usually driven by fear that is either false or overdone, according to Fisher. In either case, investors tend to sell during the downturn or near the low to limit losses because the pain of loss significantly exceeds the good feelings that come with gains, something economic behaviorists like Daniel Kahneman and Richard Thaler have considered extensively. Kahneman helped develop prospect theory, which popularized the concept of loss aversion. This theory states that people prefer small guaranteed outcomes over larger risky outcomes. Thaler's work maintains that the risk of loss is twice as powerful as the pleasure of that backdrop, it's not hard to understand why investors' emotionally driven decision-making often results in illogical choices, and breakevenitis is a prime example. Fisher describes it as the desire by investors who held through the downturn to sell their stocks once they return to flat, or breakeven. Fisher points out that rallies off downturns that return stocks to prior highs rarely roll over again and back to new lows. Instead, they continue higher, leaving sellers hoping to be proven right disappointed and portfolio values impaired. "People that get out looking for an all-clear signal later invariably miss the big gains," wrote Fisher. How to avoid breakevenitis and build a bigger portfolio Emotions have an outsized impact on our decisions, and since the stock market has historically traded higher over time, decisions that result in selling can often damage portfolios the most. Fisher thinks a simple solution can allow your portfolio to avoid falling victim to breakevenitis. "Breakevenitis is a disease that affects people, and there's a simple cure for it. Every time you get a correction and you're tempted to get out... look at the history of the returns after correction and after bear markets. No matter which you're in... the returns are bigger than any risk you could possibly have." For example, according to Sam Stovall of CFRA Research, the S&P 500 historically gains 38% in the first year of a new bull market and 12% in year two. Fisher recommends that if you feel emotionally driven to sell, consider the money you could leave on the table when stocks find their footing. While selling can protect you in the short term from losses, getting back in requires you to be right twice. You must get out before the downturn and back in on the upswing. It's tough to do that, especially when emotions are running amok. What does this mean for investors? Stocks typically go higher and lower than you think possible. Because people don't all act at once to buy or sell, when stocks are rising after a sharp sell-off, money trapped on the sidelines waiting for another dip often trickles back into stocks, helping to support stocks on pullbacks. Of course, anything can happen, but Fisher's point is that those invested in the stock market who stay the course do better than those who react emotionally, succumbing to things like 'breakevenitis.' If you're investing in individual stocks, all bets are off. Stocks can, and often have, gone to zero. However, suppose you're investing in a diversified fund or index. In that case, the odds are that a stock market recovery following a sell-off can create an opportunity for greater growth, suggesting that investors who hold pat, or dollar-cost average into the sell-off, fund manager explains why so many missed the stock market rally first appeared on TheStreet on Jul 25, 2025 This story was originally reported by TheStreet on Jul 25, 2025, where it first appeared. 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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