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President Donald Trump plans to fire FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, following months of chaos at one of the country's most important health agencies, according to a person familiar with the matter. Jeff Mason has more.

FCC Chairman Brendan Carr accused ABC of violating the equal time rule for political candidates after Rep. James Talarico, D-Texas, who is running for Senate, made an appearance on “The View” in February.

Mark Zandi, Chief Economist at Moody's Analytics, breaks down the latest jobs report, why he still sees a 40-percent chance of a recession, and what investors should watch next.

US stock benchmarks quickly resumed their road to new highs after yesterday's temporary break. Nasdaq and S&P 500 maintain their paths to price discovery, but the Dow continues to reflect heavier doubts.

A new study provides yet more evidence that investors exaggerate the forecasting ability of artificial intelligence. The study's authors found that ChatGPT doesn't even come close to matching the predictive accuracy of a low-tech model that has been around for years.

Investors can't get enough of Nvidia, AMD, Intel, and Micron as earnings season widens the divide between chip and software stocks.

Employers hired in high numbers across healthcare, retail and hospitality in April. WSJ's Ashby Jones explains why the April jobs report is an encouraging sign for job seekers.

Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee discusses the state of the labor market on CNBC's "Money Movers."

Friday's jobs report provided evidence that the central bank's larger concern is a cost of living that is getting increasingly hard to bear.

Michael Burry, best known for predicting the U.S. housing crash, said stocks are no longer reacting logically to economic data. "Stocks are not up or down because of jobs or consumer sentiment," Burry wrote.

Magna, a supplier for global carmakers, uses AI to track product quality, equipment, and energy use. It produces components for carmakers worldwide, including BYD, Toyota, Ford, and Hyundai.

The Iran war has caused the biggest disruption of global oil supplies in history and sent average U.S. gasoline prices surging past $4.50 a gallon this week.But the conflict hasn't done much damage to the American job market – at least not yet.When the Labor Department's report on April hiring and unemployment comes out Friday, it's expected to show that U.S. companies, nonprofits and government agencies together added 65,000 jobs last month, according to a survey of forecasters by the data firm FactSet. That would be down from a surprisingly strong 178,000 in March.Ordinarily, 65,000 net new jobs a month would be unimpressive.

Due to a rising demand for electricity, Three Mile Island, the site of the most famous US nuclear accident, is coming back online, as soon as mid-2027, to power chatbots and other artificial intelligence applications. Bloomberg's Will Wade reports.

Yahoo Finance's Julie Hyman breaks down the University of Michigan consumer sentiment data and its effect on the economy. DraftKings (DKNG) co-founder and CEO Jason Robins joins Yahoo Finance's Julie Hyman to discuss the earnings results, progress in prediction markets, and more.

Wall Street and Washington haven't seen the last of Trump's tariffs.

U.S. inflation will be the highlight of economic data during the week ahead as investors gauge the outlook for interest rates in the coming months.

So far, markets have been buoyant because EPS estimates for the S&P 500 have been consistently rising over the past 4 months, leading to a forward EPS multiple of 22x. The Strait of Hormuz remains closed, cutting off 25% of the world's crude supply, and significantly increasing risks of supply shocks and surging oil prices, similar to 2022's Russia/Ukraine war.

Much as we saw in Wednesday's private-sector payrolls from ADP (ADP), this morning's Employment Situation report from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) was better than expected: +115K new jobs were filled in April, more than double the +55K consensus estimate. The Unemployment Rate remained steady at +4.3%.

The current AI-driven rally in infrastructure and chip stocks echoes late-stage dot-com and 2021 bubbles, with parabolic moves and signs of euphoria. QQQ and leading hyperscalers have surged despite only mild oversold conditions, ignoring macro and monetary policy risks.

April CPI is expected to show an inflationary spike, with headline CPI rising to 3.9%, with some passthrough to core CPI. Soft data confirms that we are in an early phase of the supply-driven inflationary shock.