Category: Laptops

  • FTX Sues Voyager Digital to Recover $446 Million in Loan Repayments

    FTX Sues Voyager Digital to Recover $446 Million in Loan Repayments

    [ad_1]

    • FTX has sued crypto lender Voyager Digital to seek back $446 million in loan repayments. 
    • The two crypto firms filed for bankruptcy last year due to liquidity issues amid the so-called “crypto winter.” 
    • FTX said it seeks to pay back Alameda Research’s creditors with the recovered funds. 

    Bankrupt crypto exchange FTX sued Voyager Digital to recover $446 million in loan repayments it made to the crypto lender before imploding last November. 

    Lawyers representing FTX sued Voyager for $445.8 million, according to the lawsuit filed Monday in the US Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware. 

    FTX and Voyager Digital both filed for bankruptcy last year as turmoil engulfed cryptocurrency markets. While FTX crashed on severe liquidity issues, Voyager suffered from the so-called “crypto winter” in the digital-asset market, and cited exposure to the now-defunct Three Arrows Capital. 

    According to the lawsuit, Voyager demanded FTX and its sister trading arm Alameda Research pay all outstanding loans after it went bust last July. FTX said that on Alameda’s behalf, it paid Voyager $248.8 million in September and $193.9 million in October.

    However, those loan payments were made so close to FTX’s bankruptcy and that means the crypto exchange is entitled to take back those funds, the lawsuit claims.

    FTX seeks to use the recovered money to pay off Alameda’s creditors, per the court filing.

    FTX lawyers also acknowledged the allegations that Alameda was secretly borrowing billions of FTX’s customer funds to fund its risky investments, in the lawsuit. But what’s been “largely lost” in the narrative is Voyager’s role in fueling the alleged misconduct, it said. 

    “Largely lost in the (justified) attention paid to the alleged misconduct of Alameda and its now-indicted former leadership has been the role played by Voyager and other cryptocurrency “lenders” who funded Alameda and fueled that alleged misconduct, either knowingly or recklessly,” the lawsuit said. 

    As FTX undergoes bankruptcy proceedings, more details are emerging about the embattled firm and it’s ex-CEO Sam Bankman-Fried. According to the Guardian, FTX was being watched by Australian regulators for almost eight months before the crypto exchange crashed.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Jerome Powell’s Legacy Will Dictate Inflation, Stock Market, Economy

    Jerome Powell’s Legacy Will Dictate Inflation, Stock Market, Economy

    [ad_1]

    Jerome Powell was trying to save face. In November 2021, the Federal Reserve chairman was scrambling to redefine his public messaging on inflation, which had turned from a short-term pain, or in his words “transitory,” into a much bigger crisis

    “I think the word ‘transitory’ has different meanings to different people,” he said. “We tend to use it to mean that it won’t leave a permanent mark in the form of higher inflation. I think it’s probably a good time to retire that word.”

    In the 14 months since that testimony, Powell and the Fed have been on an aggressive mission to rein in prices — and reestablish their credibility as managers of the US economy. But just as their efforts have begun to produce signs of progress, Powell and the Fed face a new risk: going too far. 

    The Fed’s ideal scenario in the months ahead is to orchestrate a so-called “soft landing,” where inflation comes back down to their target level without causing a corresponding surge in unemployment or even a recession. But in order to achieve this outcome, many experts believe Powell and the Fed need to pause their aggressive interest-rate hikes.

    So far, however, there is no sign that the Fed is going to hit the brakes in a meaningful way. Powell has emphasized his willingness to cause short-term economic pain to bring down inflation, and economists at several major Wall Street banks believe that the Fed’s commitment to interest-rate hikes means recession is now the most likely outcome in 2023.

    This obsession with controlling inflation — and potentially causing serious pain for average Americans — is driven by one major factor: legacy. While downturns and recessions are seen as part of the normal business cycle, letting inflation become ingrained in the economy is a once-in-a-generation sin that can stain the reputation of a central banker in the history books. Joseph E. Gagnon, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and a former Federal Reserve Board associate director, told me that Powell is willing to do everything he can to avoid becoming known as the central banker that let inflation get away.

    “Powell doesn’t want his name to go down in infamy,” he said.

    The opportunity for a soft-landing scenario is still on the table, but Powell’s efforts to protect his reputation in the history books could backfire — and end up pushing the US economy into an unnecessary recession.

    The Fed is closing in on their goals

    There is no doubt that inflation needed to be conquered. The consumer price index — the most widely watched measure of inflation — peaked at 9.1% in June, the highest level since 1981. High inflation eats away at consumers’ purchasing power, and persistent inflation seeps into expectations for price and wage adjustments, which further fuel inflation. So to tackle the inflation problem, Powell led the Fed on an all-out assault on high prices, raising the central bank’s key interest rate from 0% in March 2022 to 4.5% as of December, a pace of hikes not seen in three decades. By raising interest rates, the Fed makes it more expensive to borrow money. This, in turn, slows down demand for houses, cars, and other goods by making mortgages, auto loans, and credit-card debt more costly. And as demand falls, businesses are forced to lower or hold their prices steady to attract new customers — in theory, halting the upward spiral of inflation.

     

    That inflation-fighting effort seems to be paying off. The latest CPI report showed that prices rose by 6.5% in December compared to the year before, and prices actually fell by 0.1% from the previous month. Prices for many major goods are increasing at a slower rate, and, in some cases, have started to decline. Supply-chain issues, which resulted in high shipping costs and long delivery times that pushed prices up, are also easing. While inflation is far from the Fed’s 2% target, there are signs the cooling will continue, indicating the Fed is not far from their goal. 

    Peter Essele, the head of portfolio management at Commonwealth Financial Network, pointed out in a recent chart that if month-over-month inflation continues to decline at a rate of 0.1%, the CPI would be below 3% by April and below 2% by May. And even if prices increase by 0.3% a month, CPI would still be below 3% by June, he noted. David Kelly, J.P. Morgan Asset Management’s chief global strategist, recently told Bloomberg that the Fed has accomplished its inflation goals: “This is a war that they’ve won.”

     

    What’s more, the full impact of the Fed’s rate hikes have yet to hit. Ian Shepherdson, the founder of Pantheon Macroeconomics, said in a note to clients last week that the three-month annualized measure of core inflation — inflation minus food and energy, and what the Fed pays attention to the most — is at its lowest levels since early January 2021, before inflation really started flaring up, and will continue to fall. 

    “And this, remember, is long before the full effect of the Fed’s tightening in the second half of last year has worked through the real economy and into the inflation numbers,” he said.

    Even after being subjected to the Fed’s interest-rate battering ram, the US economy is still in one piece. The unemployment rate is at a historic low of 3.5%, job gains remain solid, and consumer spending is still positive. But cracks are starting to show in places like manufacturing, financial markets, and consumer sentiment.

     

    Given the combination, many economists and experts have argued that instead of continuing to hike interest rates, the Fed should pause and allow the economy to adjust to their moves before determining the next step. “It is time to stop raising rates,” the University of Pennsylvania economist Jeremy Siegel said in mid-January.

    Economic history 101 with Professor Powell

    Despite the encouraging inflation news and the resilience of the economy, the chances of a soft landing will ultimately come down to one thing: Powell’s view of his place in history. The current bout of inflation has drawn many comparisons to the sustained price surges of the 1970s and 1980s, when the CPI rose as high as 14.5%. Arthur Burns, the Fed chairman from 1970 to 1978, is often blamed for letting inflation run so hot, bending to political pressure to keep interest rates low, which allowed crippling inflation to stick around for nearly a decade. It was only after his successor, Paul Volcker, went on a stunning three-year fight against inflation — increasing the Fed’s main interest rates as high as 19% — that prices were finally tamed. Given the parallels, it’s clear that Powell is trying to avoid going down in history as the one who let the economy spin out of control.

    “I think he feels very strongly that he absolutely has to get inflation down, and nothing will stop him from doing that,” Gagnon, of the Peterson Institute, told me. “He doesn’t want to go down in history as another Arthur Burns or the other Fed chairs who allowed inflation to gradually rise and never really controlled it in the ’60s and ’70s.”

    Barry Gill, the head of investments at UBS Asset Management, also suggested that the Fed will not pause its fight against inflation — much less pivot to supporting the economy with interest-rate cuts — because of Powell’s eye for history. 

    “My personal view is the market is being overly optimistic on the prospect of rate cuts, because I do think that the central bank’s inflation-fighting credibility is at stake here, and every Fed governor or US central banker will have thought of the plight of Art Burns and being hostage to the moment,” Gill said. “And what happened in the 1970s, nobody wants to be associated with that.”

    And as much as Powell does not want to end up with a historic reputation like Burns, he has also long admired Volcker, even going so far as to crib some of the former Fed chairman’s phrasing in recent speeches. And some experts believe Powell’s focus on the real economy, even at the expense of the stock and bond markets, is a close parallel to Volcker’s. Volcker “was never a fan of Wall Street — he didn’t give a damn what his policies did to investors,” said Danielle DiMartino Booth, a former advisor at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. “That is the characteristic of Paul Volcker that I think Jay Powell is trying to emulate,” she told me.

    This admiration for the inflation-slaying former Fed chairman has shown up in Powell’s frank diagnosis of what it will take to rein in soaring prices. “I wish there were a completely painless way to restore price stability — there isn’t,” he said at a press conference in December, after the Fed once again raised interest rates, and he forecasted that there were more on the horizon.

    While history may look back favorably on Powell if he manages to control inflation, many experts and economists believe that too much emphasis on fighting the inflation battles of the past could end up defining Powell’s legacy in a different way.

    Powell’s legacy versus the economy

    While economists and historians will litigate Powell’s reputation for years to come, most experts agree that a continued upward drive in interest rates will cause severe pain for American workers and the stock market alike.

    Cam Harvey, a professor at Duke University and the director of research at the investment firm Research Affiliates, told me that continued rate hikes won’t be able to address the price pressures that remain in the economy — most of which, he argued, are caused by idiosyncratic disruptions that the Fed can’t fix.

    “We know that many of the inflation issues are supply issues, and there could be policy initiatives — and I know the Fed doesn’t make policy, but they can certainly inform it,” Harvey told me in December. “There could be many things that we could do to mitigate the actual source of inflation, rather than this blunt instrument that just drives us into recession.”

    He added: “I think it’s counterproductive for the Fed to continue to be aggressive in increasing rates. So at this point, I would just pause.”

    Rob Arnott, the legendary investor who founded Research Affiliates, pointed to the inverted yield curve — a bond-market signal that has preceded every recession since the 1960s and was first discovered by Harvey — as a clear sign that the Fed is driving the US economy directly into a mess. “They should pause now,” he told me. “They’ve got it inverted.”

    Any Fed-driven recession, even a so-called “mild” one that some economists have predicted, would have devastating consequences for millions of Americans. Bank of America economists expect that the US economy will begin to lose 175,000 jobs a month early this year. The Fed itself sees unemployment rising to 4.6% in 2023, meaning 1.8 million Americans would lose their jobs this year, while economists at the International Monetary Fund projected that the rate could top 7%.

    Stocks would also suffer, according to Wall Street strategists. David Kostin, Goldman Sachs’ chief US equity strategist, said a recession would send the S&P 500 plunging another 22%. Morgan Stanley’s Mike Wilson, meanwhile, sees a potential slide of as much as 26%. Such a sell-off would particularly hurt those looking to retire in the months and years ahead, as many portfolios would lose significant value.

    Ken Rogoff, a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund and a professor at Harvard University, told me that the Fed should stomach somewhat higher inflation, even if it doesn’t get all the way back to their 2% goal immediately, in exchange for not sparking a recession. While he said a soft-landing scenario would be difficult to engineer, it could still happen over a longer timeline.

    Not everyone agrees that this trade-off is worth it, however. Savita Subramanian, the head of US equity, quantitative, and ESG strategy at Bank of America, believes the Fed’s aggressive tightening is warranted in order to control high inflation, and argued that the extraordinary amount of stimulus that Americans received during the pandemic is helping prop up inflation for longer, forcing the Fed to act more emphatically. “I think that the Fed’s doing what they have to do,” she told me.

    These trade-offs leave Powell in a tough spot: Massive job losses and high unemployment could certainly take some shine off his legacy, but pretty much every Fed chairman has had to deal with a recession or a downturn in their term. Over the past 50 years, only a handful have allowed inflation to run out of control.

    Legacy acts

    There are signs that certain Fed officials are ready to dial back on the inflation fight. Two members of the 19 officials who serve on the Federal Open Market Committee, the panel that officially votes on interest-rate policy, have said the Fed should hike its main interest rate by just a half-percentage point in 2023 — from 4.5% to 5%. Other members want to hike the rate higher. But in the end, just how far the Fed pushes things will almost certainly rest on Powell’s shoulders.

    Inflation left unchecked is a scourge on economies. But given how aggressively the Fed has tightened, the significant progress already made on inflation, and the dire consequences at stake for jobs and investment portfolios, the Fed might do well to take the opportunity for a soft landing while they still have it. And navigating such a tricky economy — without throwing hundreds of thousands of Americans out of work — could cement Powell’s legacy.


    William Edwards is a senior investing reporter at Insider.



    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • What Real-Life Relationship Coaches Think of ChatGPT’s Dating Advice

    What Real-Life Relationship Coaches Think of ChatGPT’s Dating Advice

    [ad_1]

    • People have used generative-AI chatbot ChatGPT for many tasks, from writing cover letters to coding.
    • Insider asked dating coaches what they think of ChatGPT’s advice for online and in-person dating.
    • Some of ChatGPT’s advice was impressive to the coaches, but they all think their jobs are safe.

    Thanks to technology advancement, dating should be easier than ever, with several ways to meet people online, keep up with them on social media, and talk to them through text and video calls.

    But even with multiple apps and bar options, it’s hard to know how to navigate the world of dating.

    Endless blog posts and guides explain how to approach someone you’re interested in, or even how to break up with someone. But now, artificial intelligence is involved.

    Enter ChatGPT, a generative-AI chatbot that’s been all over social media and the news lately for helping jobseekers write cover letters and tech company employees with software coding.

    Insider asked ChatGPT for a range of relationship advice, like how to build a dating app profile and how to know when you want to marry your partner. Four online and in-person dating coaches gave their feedback on the chatbot’s advice, and while some of them found it impressive, none of them thinks their jobs are at risk.

    While some of the more general advice from ChatGPT can help, Amy Nobile, who owns dating coaching service Love, Amy, said there are deeper layers to relationships that AI can’t get to. 

    “There’s tone, there’s intuition, and there’s emotion, and all of these nuanced human qualities,” Nobile said.

    Below are some of ChatGPT’s responses to Insider’s relationship questions and what the human relationship experts think of them.

    screenshot of ChatGPT response to How should I (a woman) reach out to a man I'm interested in on Hinge?

    Screenshot of ChatGPT response to “How should I (a woman) reach out to a man I’m interested in on Hinge?”

    ChatGPT



    Nobile said ChatGPT’s advice to mention something in a man’s profile is “decent,” but that its advice to “be respectful and considerate of his feelings and boundaries” and be “confident and direct” makes no sense, because it sounds more like advice for an in-person meeting. 

    Her first piece of advice is to have an opener you always use.

    “Ask a question that you are genuinely interested in knowing the answer to,” Nobile said. Some examples include asking about their favorite podcast or brunch spot.

    Screenshot of ChatGPT response to "What are some things I should have on my online dating profile to be attractive?"

    Screenshot of ChatGPT response to “What are some things I should have on my online dating profile to be attractive?”

    ChatGPT



    “I think the more modern advice is, you want less people to like your profile,” Nobile said. “You want to be so specific in your profile about what you want, who you are, and what you like, that you’re not getting a million likes, that the people who are liking your profile are more aligned with you.”

    Max Alley, an online-dating coach who runs Match Up Online Dating Coaching in New York City, said examples of “complaining about past relationships,” include saying “no hookups” or saying you’re looking for people only willing to commit.

    He said one big thing ChatGPT is missing is videos. 

    “It’s still newish, but on Hinge and Tinder, videos are the best type of content out there,” Alley said. It should be silly, fun, not super show off-y, short, and should have your voice in it.”

    Having a video can help the algorithm boost your profile.

    Screenshot of ChatGPT response to "What photos should I include on my online dating profile to attract the most matches?"

    Screenshot of ChatGPT response to “What photos should I include on my online dating profile to attract the most matches?”

    ChatGPT



    Alley said he would advise against adding too many travel photos, and instead opt for photos from your life to show who you are on a day-to-day basis. He also said he recommends a fuller length photo and photos without sunglasses.

    “In online dating, you want to stand out, whereas ChatGPT is going to show you what it thinks you’re supposed to put on a dating profile,” Alley said. 

    Screenshot of ChatGPT response to "How do I start a conversation with someone on Tinder that I really like?"

    Screenshot of ChatGPT response to “How do I start a conversation with someone on Tinder that I really like?”

    ChatGPT



    Alley said he talks about conversation strategies differently between men and women. ChatGPT’s advice is more geared toward men, Alley said, because they are more relevant to courting someone. He said he sometimes recommends that women bring up controversial or heavy topics to vet whether or not they’re interested in a man.

    “Women, when they come to me, they’re like, ‘how do I vet this guy,’ because for heterosexual women, often the men are ready to go out with them once they’ve already matched,” Alley said. “Women’s goal is not to necessarily build attraction or build connection, it’s to figure out if this guy’s a psychopath or not.”

    Alley said he thinks some of ChatGPT’s advice could apply to non-heterosexual couples too.

    Screenshot of ChatGPT's response to "How do I ask someone on a date?"

    Screenshot of ChatGPT’s response to “How do I ask someone on a date?”

    ChatGPT



    Paris and Joseph Dixon, a married couple who run the RealBlackLove matchmaking agency and dating app, said they would add if you’re asking someone on a date, you should tell them why you want to go with them.

    “Find reasons of commonality and then say, ‘Hey, I would love for us to get to know each other a little bit more, would you like to go out?,” Joseph said.

    Screenshot of ChatGPT response to "How do I tell someone I've been talking to that I'm no longer interested in them?

    Screenshot of ChatGPT response to “How do I tell someone I’ve been talking to that I’m no longer interested in them?

    ChatGPT



    “Anybody who’s cutting the cord or breaking up with someone, we have to consider the exact scenario,” Nobile said. “If someone’s been rude or betrayed them in some way…you don’t need to be in person. It’s more dependent on the situation and what’s led up to the breakup.”

    Nobile said a person who is ending a relationship also should be mindful of protecting their own boundaries. 

    Paris said it’s also a good idea to practice the breakup and know what you’re going to say. Like Nobile, she said how the breakup goes depends on how you and your partner have drifted apart.

    Screenshot of ChatGPT response to "How do I tell my partner I love them?"

    Screenshot of ChatGPT response to “How do I tell my partner I love them?”

    ChatGPT



    Paris said she would add that you need to qualify why you love the person.

    “Understand why you’re in love and what you love about that person,” she said. “It’s just important to let your partner know your feelings are genuine, but there’s a process to falling in love with someone, and there’s an emotional attachment that happens based off of experiences.”

    Screenshot of Chat GPT response to "How do I know if I want to marry my partner?"

    Screenshot of Chat GPT response to “How do I know if I want to marry my partner?”

    ChatGPT



    Nobile thought ChatGPT’s advice for how to know if you want to marry your partner, was “very good,” and that it mirrors some of her own relationship advice.

    “I have a three-four rule, so early on in dating, you need to check four boxes,” Nobile said. “That is connection and chemistry, core value alignment, emotional maturity and availability, and readiness.”

    Screenshot of ChatGPT response to "How do I know if someone is interested in dating me?"

    Screenshot of ChatGPT response to “How do I know if someone is interested in dating me?”

    ChatGPT



    second part of ChatGPT response to "Screenshot of ChatGPT response to "How do I know if someone is interested in dating me?"

    Screenshot of ChatGPT response to “How do I know if someone is interested in dating me?”

    ChatGPT



    Nobile said this advice is tricky, because someone can do all of these things for their own self-validation, not because they’re actually interested.

    “They can flirt, they can touch you, they can have sex with you, they can call you whatever beautiful names, they can text you all day, it literally does not mean that they even like you,” Nobile said, or that they like you enough to pursue a deeper relationship.

    Nobile said it’s a good point to remember that people can’t assume anything, and that conversations about compatibility and core values need to happen early in the relationship.

    Dealing with human behavior is “really tough,” Nobile said. “You can’t give people one size fits all answers.”

    Joseph said he’s not afraid that ChatGPT will put him and his wife out of a job.

    “The whole point is getting real-life feedback from someone who’s actually been through it,” Joseph said. “A robot has never been through these feelings, these emotions, these situations.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • I Asked ChatGPT Investors’ Top Questions. Here’s What a CIO Thought of Its Answers.

    I Asked ChatGPT Investors’ Top Questions. Here’s What a CIO Thought of Its Answers.

    [ad_1]

    • I asked ChatGPT questions about markets and showed the answers to Morningstar Investment Management CIO Dan Kemp.
    • He called some of its knowledge “remarkable” – but isn’t worried it’ll put top strategists out of their jobs anytime soon.
    • “It provides answers, but it doesn’t ask questions like a good investment manager,” Kemp said.

    Intelligent language tool ChatGPT can write cover letters, generate dating app messages – and provide investing advice.

    Inspired by my esteemed colleagues Bea Nolan and Phil Rosen, I decided to find out whether the bot’s insight on markets is up to scratch.

    I fed the OpenAI program four questions that are top-of-mind for investors right now, and then shared its responses with Morningstar Investment Management’s global CIO Dan Kemp.

    Kemp, whose firm manages around $250 billion worth of assets, was impressed with the quality of ChatGPT’s knowledge and prose but said it lacked the depth of analysis you’d find speaking to a top stock picker or financial advisor.

    “The quality of its responses is remarkable,” he told me. “That said, I don’t think it’s helpful as an investment decision-making tool, either for professionals or laypeople.” 

    “It provides factual answers that are descriptive and are generalized,” Kemp added. “But it doesn’t ask questions like a good investment manager does.”

    Here are the four questions I asked ChatGPT:

    • How should I invest during a recession?
    • What impact will the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate increases have on a portfolio?
    • What investments are a good hedge against high inflation?
    • Should I invest in cryptocurrencies?

    The questions reflect some of the biggest ongoing concerns of retail investors – after the threat of a recession, Fed rate hikes and high inflation rattled stocks and caused the the ‘crypto winter’ of the past year.

    ChatGPT quickly churned out a set of answers you’d find in a good markets textbook – recommending “invest[ing] in companies that have a strong track record of performance” during a recession and saying that “higher interest rates can make stocks less attractive to investors, which can lead to a decline in stock prices”.

    Kemp told me he was impressed with the breadth of the bot’s knowledge – especially its ability to avoid unnecessary jargon when producing stock market content.

    “It’s quite amazing how ChatGPT can gather what is known about a particular subject by the investment community and then convey it in a very understandable format,” he said. “If you haven’t used ChatGPT before, it’s genuinely surprising that an engine can do that with subjects as diverse as recessions and cryptocurrencies.”

    But the bot can only generate what Kemp called “first-level responses” – meaning that while its knowledge of the stock market is impressive, it can’t apply that knowledge to specific situations in the manner a top Wall Street analyst or old-fashioned financial advisor would.

    “It can tell you the things that everybody knows,” he said. “When you asked it about inflation hedges, it mentions inflation-linked assets – clearly, that’s correct, but that’s a very limited help when making an investment decision.” 

    “When making investments, you not only have to consider the fair return of investment, but also the price at which it’s trading,” Kemp added. “So you have to understand not only the basic features of an investment, but also how that investment is perceived by other investors.”

    “That’s what people call second-level thinking – and it’s something that ChatGPT doesn’t appear able to do.”

    Kemp was also concerned with ChatGPT’s response to my question on cryptocurrencies. The bot told me that “investing in cryptocurrencies is a high-risk, high-reward endeavor” – but rising interest rates meant most digital assets offered no returns at all in 2022, with the largest token bitcoin‘s price plummeting over 60% to under $17,000.

    “I found this troubling because ChatGPT has clearly learned that to gain a high return, you typically have to take a high risk,” he told me. “It’s an interesting mistake and it’s one that lots of investors made last year – not every high risk comes with a high reward.”

    Kemp’s feedback chimes with what people tend to love – and dislike – about ChatGPT.

    The language tool can churn out high-quality content alarmingly quickly – but its words tend to lack personality and depth.

    So don’t expect it to become a go-to engine for investing advice anytime soon.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Marie Kondo Says She’s ‘Kind of Given up’ on Tidying up

    Marie Kondo Says She’s ‘Kind of Given up’ on Tidying up

    [ad_1]

    • Tidying guru Marie Kondo says she’s done with constantly keeping her house neat.
    • Kondo said after three kids, she’s “kind of given up” on constantly tidying up, per The Washington Post.
    • Kondo has spent years — and built a career around — advocating for spotless homes.

    Tidying guru Marie Kondo says that after having three children, she too has given up on keeping her house spotless.

    “Up until now, I was a professional tidier, so I did my best to keep my home tidy at all times,” Kondo said at a recent webinar, per The Washington Post.

    “I have kind of given up on that in a good way for me. Now I realize what is important to me is enjoying spending time with my children at home,” she added. 

    Kondo added during the webinar that her home might now be “messy,” but she feels she is spending her time “the right way.” 

    Kondo had her third child — a boy — in April 2021. She has two other children with her husband Takumi Kawahara, daughters Satsuki and Miko, per People

    Kondo built a business empire around advocating for clean homes. Her book, “The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up,” topped the New York Times Best Seller list in 2014. 

    Kondo’s “KonMari” cleaning method inspired people to whip their homes into shape by discarding things that do not “spark joy.” The method sparked a movement, and people around the world have been “Kondo-ing” their homes and decluttering their workspaces

    Her book also sparked a Netflix special, “Tidying Up,” which gave people tips on how to keep their living spaces neat.

    Representatives for Kondo did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Russia-Ukraine War Broke Down Defense-Industry ‘Taboos’: Recruiter

    Russia-Ukraine War Broke Down Defense-Industry ‘Taboos’: Recruiter

    [ad_1]

    • Eva Brückner is a recruiter at Heinrich & Coll., a German HR consultancy.
    • She finds skilled workers to fill key roles within defense companies.
    • She told Insider how the Russian invasion of Ukraine has changed recruitment in the industry.

    This is an edited, translated version of an article that originally appeared on January 23, 2023. 

    In her role as a recruiter at the German HR consultancy Heinrich & Coll., Eva Brückner looks for potential middle- and upper-level managers in the defense industry.  

    She told Insider that the firm often only reveals companies’ names to candidates when they get through to the interview stage because of moral concerns about working for weapons manufacturers. 

    If she were recruiting for a particularly specialized role, she would sometimes only tell the candidate the company’s name when they’re due to meet with the hiring company, she said. 

    But Russia’s invasion of Ukraine changed this, she said. “There has been a notable removal of taboos in the defense sector,” Brückner said.  

    “Armaments are no longer seen as purely evil or as solely used for attack. Now people see they can be used for protection as well,” she said, adding that she had seen more interested applicants coming to her about open positions because they wanted to contribute to the defense effort. 

    The German government also vowed to increase military spending in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    German Chancellor Olaf Scholz announced the creation of a special 100 billion-euro fund to support and modernize the country’s armed forces. 

    The manufacturers Brückner works with are primarily looking for engineers, business economists, and program managers, she told Insider. 

    She gets applications from people already working in the security, defense, automotive, or mechanical-engineering industries, she continued. 

    She added that certain manufacturers are also targeting female managers in their hiring drives, adding that, in her experience, “women very rarely apply for our normal job postings.”  

    And that’s despite salaries in the industry being in the six-figure range, depending on the position. 

    A business-development role in the industry in Germany would normally earn between 80,000 and 110,000 euros, or between around $87,000 and $120,000, Brückner continued.

    As a department head, you could earn up to 250,000 euros, or about $272,000, a year, she added. 

    Brückner said she was not seeing many women apply for the roles because, she thought, they were less likely than men to “believe they can learn those skills on the job.” 

    To recruit more women to defense, Brückner said her company was “flipping the search” and starting by finding good candidates before seeking positions they could be suitable for, rather than only looking for candidates for existing open positions. 

    For upper- and middle-management roles, Brückner said she primarily looked at women who had already taken their first steps in management and were working in fields like engineering, sales, strategy, and business-development. 

    “They don’t have to have worked in the defense industry for a long time. But they should be stable, able to stand up to challenges, and show leadership and empathy,” Brückner said. 

    Female candidates should understand before they apply that men still dominate many defense companies at the executive level, Brückner added. 

    Whatever peoples’ prevailing attitudes toward defense are, Brückner said, all candidates should still consider the moral implications of the work and whether they would feel comfortable sharing what they do. 

    “We prepare our candidates for these challenges in the defense industry,” Brückner said, adding that she asks potential applicants, “How do you deal with it when you have to explain to other parents from kindergarten or your children where you work?”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • My 9 Favorite Amenities on Royal Caribbean’s Wonder of the Seas Cruise

    My 9 Favorite Amenities on Royal Caribbean’s Wonder of the Seas Cruise

    [ad_1]

    It’s now my favorite cruise ship I’ve traveled on for work.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    And much to my surprise, all of the typical complaints I have about cruise didn’t apply to this behemoth floating city.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    My biggest qualm with cruise vacations is that it’s often easy to feel trapped and bored. I can only sit by the pool for so many hours before feeling tireless.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    And as much as I love staring at the ocean, I don’t think I could do it for hours while sitting inside a cruise ship lounge.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    But it’s hard to feel stuck on a ship designed to entertain up to 9,288 occupants, guests and crew included.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    The Wonder of the Seas’ 18 decks are filled with amenities for every intergenerational family, whether it be children with boundless energy or adults who want some quiet relaxation.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    I can’t speak for children or older adults, but these were my 9 favorite amenities aboard the mega cruise ship as a solo adult passenger who was new to the brand.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    Royal Caribbean’s Oasis Class Wonder of the Seas is a behemoth of a vessel.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    The floating city has 24 elevators, 2,867 staterooms, and eight neighborhoods.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    And these neighborhoods are all vastly different from its counterparts.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    No matter where I went, I was amused and captivated by the variety of sights and spaces, many of which looked nothing like a cruise ship.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    There were so many attractions pulling me in different directions, I had a hard time picking where to begin.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    I was consistently lost even after two nights at sea.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    But there’s something enjoyable about learning your way around a ship this large. It kept my short trip entertaining, busy, and exhausting.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    2. To feed up to 7,084 guests, the ship has over 20 dining venues.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    But there’s options for all picky eaters, whether they like teppanyaki, seafood, Southern comfort, or Johnny Rockets.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    The seafood-forward Hooked Seafood served up a satisfying and fresh meal. It didn’t blow my mind but I had no complaints.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    Unfortunately, the new-to-the-brand Southern restaurant Mason Jar fell short of offering a satisfying meal.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    But the option is there for travelers who can’t go a few days without gumbo and fried chicken.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    3. The complimentary food venues were just as enjoyable as the specialty restaurants.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    The Italian pizza shop and open-air build-your-own taco bar were both decent fast-casual eateries.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    While the food wasn’t outstanding, these options were great for grabbing a quick mid-day snack.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    But to my surprise, the buffet was the best I had ever seen on a cruise ship.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    Some of the most memorable bites were at this buffet, something I never thought would happen aboard a cruise ship.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    There were plenty of options like international fare, classic hits, and seafood. The latter — some raw — was just as craveable as the options at Hooked Seafood.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    The buffet was consistent. And in retrospect, I would’ve been content eating most of my meals here.

    Royal Caribbean Wonder of the Seas cruise ship



    Brittany Chang/Insider


    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Elon Musk Tells Court Google Had ‘Standing Interest’ in Buying Tesla

    Elon Musk Tells Court Google Had ‘Standing Interest’ in Buying Tesla

    [ad_1]

    • Elon Musk said Google had a “standing interest in buying Tesla” in testimony in the securities fraud trial.
    • The Tesla CEO said this helped encourage him to try to secure funds to take the EV maker private.
    • According to a 2015 book, Musk and former Google CEO Larry Page had an $11 billion deal in place for Tesla.  

    Tesla CEO Elon Musk told a court Tuesday that Google had a “standing interest” in buying the electric-vehicle maker, which encouraged him to try taking the company private with Saudi funds.

    The billionaire pointed to the interest from Google’s parent Alphabet laid down in an earlier deposition,  Marketwatch reported, as he defended his 2018 “funding secured” tweet in an ongoing civil trial.

    Musk told his lawyer Alex Spiro in a cross-examination that this factored into his decision to try and take Tesla private.

    The San Francisco trial is the result of a class-action shareholder lawsuit that alleges Musk committed securities fraud with the tweet. The investors have accused Musk of illegally manipulating Tesla’s stock price by saying he had funding in place to take the carmaker private at $420 a share.

    Musk said that in planning to take Tesla private, he entered into negotiations with the Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF), which he said “unequivocally” supported his plan, per Bloomberg.

    But he described the sovereign wealth fund’s governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan as “backpedaling” on verbal assurances of commitment made to Musk in Tesla’s factory. The CEO said Al-Rumayyan was “ass covering” in later texts.

    Saudis are the second largest investors in Musk’s social platform company Twitter, which he acquired for $44 billion in October. 

    Musk also said he would have sold SpaceX stock to take Tesla private.

    According to a 2015 book on Musk, the Tesla CEO had an $11 billion deal in place to sell the company to Google in 2013, but it fell through when Musk and former Google CEO Larry Page started arguing over specifics of the deal, during which time Google began to turn a profit. 

    He has since had a more distinct cooling in relations with Google. Co-founder Sergey Brin was set to cash in his shares in the automaker — which he bought before it went public in 2010 — last year amid a report in the Wall Street Journal that Musk had an affair with his wife

    Musk’s trial rests on his assertion that he did not mislead investors when he tweeted that he had secured finances to take Tesla private at $420, because he did indeed have funding for the deal. Shares in Tesla have jumped more than 14% in the last five days as the trial continues.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Meet the Drapers, VC Royalty

    Meet the Drapers, VC Royalty

    [ad_1]

    • The billionaire Tim Draper is part of a lineage often lauded as Silicon Valley’s premier VC family.
    • His grandfather founded the VC firm Draper, Gaither, and Anderson.
    • Tim’s children, three of whom carry on the VC torch, could be deemed tech’s ultimate nepo babies.

    Celebrities bristling about being called “nepo babies” could learn from William Henry Draper III, one of Silicon Valley’s premier venture capitalists who has recognized his family’s close ties and their influence on the family’s successes.

    “Networks are critical to the successful venture capitalist,” Draper, who cofounded elite investment projects like Sutter Hill Ventures, wrote in his 2012 semi-autobiographical book, “The Startup Game.”

    In other words, the adage: It’s all about who you know. Anyone who has hustled and pounded the pavement to break into a competitive field understands there’s an elusive alchemy to how connections can form and the doors they open.

    As far as powerful professional networks go, it’s hard to top the Draper family tree. 

    Draper’s venture-capital career began in the 1950s at his father’s own trailblazing firm, Draper, Gaither, and Anderson, an early entrant in a new field. He wrote that he joined it, in part, for the “unique opportunity to learn from a master.” Striking out with his peers in the next decade, he went on to invest in early IT-infrastructure companies including Kasper Instruments.

    He paid it forward to his son, Tim Draper, who made his own early VC investments in the ’80s using a family vehicle that was then called Draper Associates, according to “The Startup Game.”

    During the dot-com era, the father and son would hold court at the Stanford-adjacent social haunts where the elder Draper connected Tim — a Stanford alumnus — with people like Yahoo’s cofounder Jerry Yang. (Draper wrote that he even attended the Yahoo pitch meeting “on the chance that I could be of help to Tim,” though the deal eventually went to Sequoia.)

    With his own ventures, Tim went on to back the likes of Hotmail, Skype, Coinbase, and, less fortuitously, Theranos, the blood-testing startup founded by his family friend Elizabeth Holmes.

    Meet the Drapers,” the game show that Tim cocreated and launched in 2017, positions the family as enduring industry power players. On the show, Draper, Tim, and Draper’s daughter Polly Draper, along with other family members who drop by as “guest judges,” field pitches from founders competing for Tim’s $1 million investment check. The show ran internationally on channels including Sony Entertainment Television.

    As evidenced on the series, the family’s scions tend to wear their legacy as a badge of honor. Tim’s children Jesse Draper, who leads Halogen VC, and Adam Draper, who is behind Boost VC, are even identified as “4th generation venture capitalists” in their public bios.

    And the Draper empire extends beyond tech investing. Tim and his children were also in the actor-producer Polly’s Nickelodeon show, “The Naked Brothers Band.” Polly’s son Alex Wolff is a Hollywood rising star you might know from hits like the 2018 horror film “Hereditary.”

    All of this is to say that the Drapers have benefited from their last name and fall into the category of “nepo babies,” a term made popular by a New York Magazine story about nepotism in the insular world of Hollywood. 

    Family can play just as big a role in the tech world. Even in a book promoting grind, tenacity, and savvy risk-taking as elements of successful investing, Draper acknowledged it: “I was lucky to have been born to a great father.”

    Meet the Draper family, the ultimate tech nepo babies and Silicon Valley royalty.

    Tim Draper 

    Draper Associates Founder Tim Draper speaks during the Web Summit 2018 in Lisbon, Portugal on November 6, 2018.

    Tim is worth $1.2 billion, according to Forbes’ estimate.

    Pedro Fiúza/NurPhoto via Getty Images



    Tim, who followed in his father’s footsteps as a young adult after getting in some early practice with his family investing firm, cofounded the blockbuster venture firm Draper Fisher Jurvetson in 1985, when he was in his early 20s. DFJ had more than 900 investments, according to PitchBook, including in companies such as Tesla and Baidu. DFJ’s founding partners have all left, and the firm became known as Threshold Ventures in 2019, Axios reported at the time.

    A gregarious presence on his show, “Meet the Drapers,” Tim has an easy laugh and sports his signature tie polka-dotted with the bitcoin symbol.

    With a $1.2 billion net worth, according to Forbes’ estimate, his reach is far — he bought an island in Tanzania, where he’s invested in a hotel — and sometimes personal. In addition to creating and hosting a show featuring members of his family, he’s credited as an advisor for his daughter Jesse’s firm, Halogen Ventures, and as a producer on his sister’s Nickelodeon show, in which he played the character Principal Schmoke. 

    Jesse Draper 

    jesse draper

    Jesse Draper founded Halogen Ventures, which counts her father as an advisor.

    Jesse Draper



    Jesse announced herself on the tech scene in the late 2000s with her web series, “The Valley Girl Show,” which featured quirky interviews with entrepreneurs in Tim’s circle. Some notable guests included then-Google CEO Eric Schmidt (who wrote the foreword for her grandfather’s book), Elon Musk, and Stephen Jurvetson, who cofounded DFJ with Jesse’s father. 

    Tim helped arrange some early interviews, according to a Fast Company feature on the family in 2012.

    Jesse’s firm, Halogen Ventures, which she launched in 2015 in her late 20s, was the culmination of what she described as an indirect path to VC-hood.

    “I’m the weirdest VC story, I think, of all time,” she said in a March episode of the “Startup Renegades” podcast.

    Jesse attended film school at the University of California, Los Angeles, where she also took business courses and focused first on her acting career. She was eventually put off by the objectification she observed at auditions, she said on the podcast episode, and switched gears to do “Valley Girl,” which went on to become a TV show carried by a CBS-linked station

    That put her on a path to investing, she said, because as the show’s host, she was hearing more from new founders looking to get noticed. She’d alert investors in her circle to those who showed potential, she said on “Startup Renegades.”

    “Sometimes, I’d write them a tiny check, and some of those deals did really well for me,” she added.

    That helped lay the foundation for what later became Halogen, she said. Halogen has invested in dozens of brands targeted at women like the Instagram beauty darling Live Tinted and the investment company Ellevest. It lists her father as an advisor.

    Adam Draper

    Adam Draper

    Adam Draper followed in his father’s footsteps, founding Boost VC in 2012.

    Michael Macor/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images



    Adam’s LinkedIn bio indicates that as a college undergrad, he cofounded Xpert Financial in 2009.

    The Fast Company feature said Tim facilitated Adam’s inclusion into the company’s founding “in a single afternoon” when Tim helped Jesse’s old classmate Thomas Foley fine-tune the idea. Xpert Financial, a digital marketplace to connect private companies with investors, is no longer in business, according to PitchBook.     

    In 2012, Adam founded Boost VC, which has made over 400 investments in a variety of tech and crypto companies, according to PitchBook. Like his father, Adam has invested in the crypto exchange Coinbase, according to the Boost VC website.

    Billy Draper

    In 2016, Billy Draper was on Forbes’ “30 Under 30” list as a 26-year-old in the venture-capital category. In his Forbes write-up, he was credited with being a “full-time investor since June 2014.”

    He worked at firms like Meta and his father’s Draper Associates (a separate investing firm that evolved alongside Draper Fisher Jurvetson) after studying film at UCLA like his sister, according to his LinkedIn bio

    He’s gone on to found his own firm, Path VC, which invests in very-early-stage companies, according to the firm’s bio. He’s invested alongside his father in companies like Robinhood, according to Draper Associate’s website

    Eleanor Draper

    Elle Draper

    Elle Draper, who has the smallest online presence of the Draper children, founded a scrunchie brand.

    Sean Zanni/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images



    Eleanor Draper has the smallest visible online presence out of her siblings. Her LinkedIn bio indicates she received training at institutions including Draper University, an “entrepreneurship program” founded by Tim, according to its website. The more than monthlong program costs $12,000 to attend, according to its website.

    She used that training in 2018 to launch a scrunchie company called Lemonelle, according to her LinkedIn.



    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • I Watched My First Rocket Launch. It Wasn’t Like SpaceX, Blue Origin.

    I Watched My First Rocket Launch. It Wasn’t Like SpaceX, Blue Origin.

    [ad_1]

    Even though Virgin Orbit’s LauncherOne failed and all I saw was a plane take off, the event was unforgettable. I wasn’t expecting a silent disco and food trucks at a rocket launch. It was also something spectacular for Cornwall, and I could see the residents were buzzing with excitement about the idea of their quiet seaside town making history.

    Insider reporter in front of LauncherOne rocket replica.



    Kate Duffy/Insider


    [ad_2]

    Source link