The enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it’s the illusion of knowledge (Stephen Hawking)

It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so (Mark Twain)

Invest with smart knowledge and objective odds

YOUR DAILY EDGE: 27 February 2026

Tech Has Never Caused a Job Apocalypse. Don’t Bet on It Now. Neither theory, history or the latest data suggests a recession driven by AI job dislocation is likely

Greg Ip:

(…) AI disruption makes news almost daily. On Thursday, payments company Block said it was laying off 4,000 employees, 40% of its workforce, because AI has “changed what it means to build and run a company,” founder Jack Dorsey told shareholders. “Within the next year, I believe the majority of companies will reach the same conclusion.”

Is this just the beginning? No one should dismiss any scenario, even the most dystopian, with high conviction. Certainly not journalists, whose way of life is in AI’s crosshairs.

But I keep stumbling over one small problem with the doomsday vision: It requires a breakdown in how the market economy functions. Nothing like it has happened in the U.S. before, and there is no evidence it is happening now. (…)

The AI doomers claim this time is different. AI is happening faster and does far more than past technological revolutions. It could one day exceed human intelligence. (…)

If such a revolution were upon us, we should see some sign of it. We don’t, at least not yet. The ranks of software developers, widely assumed to be acutely vulnerable to AI, are up 5% in January from a year earlier, a pace largely consistent with the past 23 years. (…)

The number of computer programmers, who assist developers in ensuring code runs properly, was down slightly in the last year, in line with a secular decline in place for decades. Neither trend shifted much after ChatGPT’s arrival in late 2022. Competition from AI isn’t forcing computer scientists to take pay cuts, either. In 2024, the median young computer science graduate earned 63% more than the typical young graduate, up from 47% in 2009, data from Connor O’Brien at the Institute for Progress shows.  

Meanwhile, business spending on software leapt 11% in the fourth quarter of last year from a year earlier, the fastest in nearly three years. Bessen sees this as evidence that software demand is elastic, meaning as the price per unit of performance falls, demand rises more.

This, Bessen notes, is in line with previous technological advances that drive prices down and demand up enough to offset direct job displacement. His examples include textile manufacturing in the 19th century, and the spread of ATMs in the 1980s. 

My favorite example: As the number of bookkeepers shrank with the introduction of spreadsheet software in the early 1980s, the number of accountants and financial analysts newly empowered by Lotus 1-2-3 and Excel rose even more.

A study by Erik Brynjolfsson of Stanford University and two co-authors has found early signs of an AI impact: employment of 22- to 25-year-olds in the most AI-exposed occupations such as software developers and customer service agents fell 6% in the three years after the introduction of ChatGPT while that of older workers and workers in unexposed occupations rose.

But some critics say the drop could be explained by other factors, such as rising interest rates, that predate ChatGPT. Job postings for software developers jumped in the wake of the pandemic, then started to fall in early 2022, according to Indeed Hiring Lab.

Perhaps the advanced AI tools only now coming to market will change behavior in a way their predecessors didn’t. The doomsday scenario envisions businesses ditching legacy systems and consumers turning over many of their tasks to AI “agents” almost overnight.

In reality, businesses are risk-averse and consumers creatures of habit. Radiologists were supposed to lose their jobs to offshoring, and then to AI. They didn’t, because patients and providers like having humans around to explain their medical images. Since Google Translate launched in 2006, the number of human translator and interpreter employees in the U.S. has risen 73%.

Assume, though, that AI does destroy more jobs than it creates. Could the spillovers sink the entire economy? Almost certainly not. The money employers or consumers save as AI eliminates jobs doesn’t disappear; it gets spent on something else. This is why a sector can be in recession while the overall economy grows.

China’s entry into the World Trade Organization in 2001 cost the U.S. hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs in the following years. Oil and gas production jobs fell by a quarter after oil prices collapsed in 2014. And amid a spasm of bricks-and-mortar bankruptcies driven in part by e-commerce, retail employment fell by a quarter-million between 2017 and late 2019. In all three episodes, overall employment grew.

The real risk:

Imagine a recession starts for some other reason. Employers could respond with AI-driven job cuts they were contemplating anyway, deepening the downturn.

Another possibility: Tech investment gets ahead of demand, precipitating a bust. Tech workers lost jobs in droves after 2001, not because the internet had made them obsolete, but because the internet-stock bubble had burst.

Today, the sums being plowed into data centers far exceed the revenue AI is currently generating. A bust that brings down the economy isn’t my baseline. But at least it has a precedent, unlike the AI apocalypse that preoccupies folks now.

The other real risk, God forbids:

America’s Bills Will Come Due As the federal debt keeps ballooning, options are narrowing to avert a crisis.

The first law of holes: When you’re in one, stop digging. The Trump administration didn’t get this memo.

Despite America’s large and deepening budget deficit, President Trump has endorsed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s request for a $500 billion increase in annual appropriations for the 2027 military budget. Administration officials are reportedly at odds about how to spend this money.

Led by Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought, the Trump administration may propose substantial cuts in domestic discretionary spending for fiscal 2027. It might seem like this would offset the increase in Pentagon spending, but the administration tried this same strategy in 2026 to little effect. Congress rejected most of the administration’s proposed reductions in domestic spending for fiscal 2026. (…)

There’s no reason to believe next year’s proposed cuts will fare any better. It would take significant domestic reductions to pay for an extra half-trillion in defense spending, but it’s clear neither party is willing to take the heat for domestic spending cuts of this size. Either Congress will reject Mr. Hegseth’s push to remake the Pentagon’s budget, or the federal budget deficit will increase.

The latter is unacceptable, because the fiscal status quo already is unacceptable. Earlier this month, the Congressional Budget Office issued its budget projections for the next decade. The federal deficit, pegged at $1.9 trillion for 2026, will rise to $3.1 trillion in 2036. The federal debt, which now stands at more than $30 trillion, will soar to $56 trillion—from 100% of gross domestic product to 120%. (…)

This year, interest payments on the federal debt will total more than $1 trillion, which is larger than the defense budget. Ten years from now, these payments will more than double, to a level close to discretionary spending for defense and domestic programs combined. By then, about two-thirds of federal borrowing will go toward interest payments. And it will only get worse after that.

The last time the U.S. had a balanced federal budget was 25 years ago. Since then, presidents and lawmakers of both parties have acted without regard for the country’s long-term fiscal health.

You might ask: So what? Deficit hawks have been predicting doom for decades, and it never happens. Why should the future be any different?

Because this can’t go on indefinitely. At some point, potential lenders to the U.S. will develop serious doubts about our capacity to repay what we borrow. They will demand higher interest rates to compensate them for the risk, triggering an economic slowdown that will reduce revenue, exacerbate the fiscal crisis, and create a vicious circle. We don’t know when this will happen, but economics and history tell us that it will. As the late economist and presidential adviser Herb Stein famously said, “If something cannot go on forever, it will stop.” (…)

(…) the path to fiscal responsibility must begin now, in the 2027 budget. To the extent that Congress and the administration can’t agree on spending cuts large enough to finance a large increase in defense spending, they should fill the gap with an across-the-board income surtax. They shouldn’t enact spending for defense—or any other item—that raises the budget deficit above the baseline. Nor should they enact new tax cuts that raise the deficit. This is what it means to stop digging.

image

Majorities of Americans don’t have much trust in AI and think companies are investing too much in it. Most Americans say AI will decrease the availability of jobs. More say it will have a negative effect on the economy than say it will have a positive effect. Most Americans have used artificial intelligence (AI), but only one-quarter use it regularly.

What you need to know about Americans’ views on artificial intelligence, as of the February 13 – 16, 2026 Economist / YouGov Poll.

A majority (58%) of Americans say they do not trust AI much or don’t trust it at all. About one-third (35%) trust it a fair amount or a great deal

Nearly two-thirds (63%) of Americans think AI will lead to a decrease in the number of jobs available in the U.S. Only 7% say it will increase the number of jobs and 12% say it will not affect jobs’ availability. These shares have not significantly changed since this question was asked in September 2025

A majority (54%) of Americans think companies are investing too much in AI. 22% of Americans say companies are investing the right amount and 4% think they are investing too little.

Did you miss Fear the Fear?

Who better to ask whether AI is killing the jobs market than our robot overlords themselves? In a week when AI doom-mongering has dominated headlines, the answer may surprise you. James Smith weighs up the evidence and explains why, for now at least, the drivers of employment look more traditional.

Here’s what I did: I took vacancy data from hiring agency Indeed, covering roughly 50 different sectors. Then I asked my trusty AI assistant/manager/grim reaper (delete as appropriate) to score them between one and 10 depending on how exposed the sector is to AI job losses.

It did a reasonable job at identifying its victims. Unsurprisingly, software was an 8/10. IT design/documentation was a nine, though surprisingly so was driving (can you tell AI lives in California?). Customer service is a solid 10/10. AI has clearly never had the pleasure of using the automated phone line of its utilities provider…

Still, it gives us something to play with. But when I then mapped these against the change in vacancies since the start of 2024, there couldn’t be less of a relationship. That’s true whether you look at the US, UK, France and largely Germany too (though squint carefully and there are hints of a trend line). And before you accuse me of cherry-picking the wrong time window, the results are basically the same whatever horizon you pick.

No obvious sign that AI-exposed sectors have seen vacancies drop faster

“AI exposure” based on asking an AI chatbot to rank each sector from one (not exposed to AI at all) to 10 (extremely exposed to AI job losses). Don’t take the results too literally…
Source: Macrobond/Indeed, ING

Obviously, this is a bit of simplistic Friday fun and definitely shouldn’t be used to justify a sell-off in the US stock market, unlike *ahem* certain other articles this week.

But it chimes with what the data is telling us more broadly. The Indeed data also shows a surprise spike in UK and US software vacancies over the past year, a time when broader job openings fell. Data from Challenger, a company that tracks job cut announcements, reckons that fewer than one in 10 layoffs since last April were down to AI. And even then, I wonder whether this is a convenient scapegoat masking more conventional motivations for reducing staff.

Strikingly, data monitored by the St Louis Fed shows that just 12% of American workers were using GenAI on a daily basis in their job, as of November, barely higher than a year earlier.

OK, so what about rising youth unemployment? US 18-24 joblessness is up more than a percentage point since early 2024 – and by three if you ignore a suspiciously large drop in January. It has reached new highs in the UK, too.

Tempting as it is to blame this on an AI-induced hiring drought among graduates, there is a simpler explanation. In both the US and Britain, the appetite to hire has fallen dramatically, even if there’s not much desire to fire, either. That is true across the vast majority of sectors. And in that environment, young people are always going to be disproportionately affected. That’s why the unemployment rate for those age groups tends to swing more wildly – up and down – than the national average.

Compounding those challenges in the UK, last year’s payroll tax and minimum wage hikes hit consumer services particularly hard – and those sectors tend to be more heavily represented by younger workers.

Wanted: Software engineers

- Source: Macrobond, ING

Source: Macrobond, ING

The simple message here is that the drivers of the jobs market right now are more traditional. (…)

Now this:

AI and the Data Center Backlash

(…) “Many Americans are also concerned that energy demand from AI data centers could unfairly drive up their electric utility bills,” Mr. Trump said. “We’re telling the major tech companies that they have the obligation to provide for their own power needs.” This may soon become a political and business necessity.

A report this week by real-estate brokerage CBRE Group showed that data-center construction slowed late last year amid permitting headaches and delays connecting to the grid. Many states are threatening to impose restrictions on data centers unless they build their own power sources. (…)

Now something will have to give, but it needn’t be reliable power or America’s AI ambitions. (…)

The U.S. can’t afford to lose to China in the race for AI, and Americans shouldn’t have to pay for the cost of tech companies’ green virtue signaling.

Alas, the WSJ Editorial Board gives no clues how to solve this thorny dilemma other than suggest that hyperscalers need to deal with all the popular backlash, regulations, the shortages and the costs, including tariffs. During the midterms.

The FT’s Gillian Tett today reminds us that:

Jensen Huang, head of Nvidia, for example, told the FT last year that China could “win the AI race” with the US because its “power is free”. Elon Musk says that “based on current trends, China will far exceed the rest of the world in AI compute” because it will have three times America’s electricity output by late 2026.

And OpenAI has called for government action. “The US leads the world in developing AI [but] keeping that edge requires far more electricity than the US can currently provide,” it declared in a memo last year. “Electrons are the new oil.” (…)

It will be hard to shield voters from a looming energy squeeze, even if Trump does bully the tech companies into building their own generators. To cite one issue: since many data centres use diesel generators as a backup, “price increases of 20 to 50 per cent could be expected in the tight global diesel market” soon, according to Philip Verleger, an energy economist. 

Another enormous problem is electricity transmission. China has raced to build high-voltage lines in recent years. But America has not. This cannot be fixed by the private sector or states without federal action because lines typically cross state borders.

However, there has hitherto been very little done — either by Democratic or Republican presidents. “In 2008, a new [transmission] project typically had to wait less than two years to get connected. But by 2024, it was over 4.5 years,” notes Heather Boushey, former economic adviser in the Biden White House. 

Worse still, Trump is waging ideological war on renewable energy. Yes, China is using fossil fuels to expand its grid (including, lamentably, coal). But as Kyle Chan, an energy expert at Brookings, notes: “Over half of China’s [recent] electricity growth during [the last decade] has come from clean energy sources, such as wind, solar and hydropower.” These are fast and cheap to install — even before noting the climate change benefits.

But Trump’s “drill, baby, drill” mantra makes him reluctant to embrace renewables even as a complementary power source, let alone as a replacement for fossil fuels. Indeed last summer the energy department terminated a planned $4.9bn loan guarantee for an 800-mile “Grain Belt Express” power line intended to take wind power from Kansas to Illinois and Indiana. This is mad.

So can America close the gap with China? Some White House officials tell me it can, by using federal powers to install transmission lines and forcing Big Tech to pay for huge energy investments.

David Victor, a professor at UC San Diego, thinks more innovation will also help. “The really big [future] story in energy will be energy-saving innovation for the chips,” he says. “Many of the scenarios for rapacious energy growth for data centres are quite frothy [since] many of these projects will not be needed, especially if the AI bubble bursts.”

One hopes so. But unless — or until — this occurs, the saga will be yet more evidence of why joined-up, proactive, pragmatic policies can outperform a governance system plagued by polarisation and excess financialisation.

Future US historians may well weep. But right now, tech investors should ponder the grubby real-world problems of power — in both a political and literal sense.

US utilities generated a record amount of energy from renewable sources last year, even as the Trump administration implemented a range of policies to stymie green energy.

Some 1,162 terrawatt-hours of the country’s electricity was generated from renewable sources in 2025, a 10% increase over the prior year, according to federal data released this week. That represents 26% of all US electricity made — enough to power about 108 million US homes for a year. (…)

That stands in contrast to the Trump administration slashing incentives for wind and solar while gutting clean air regulations in a bid to help fossil fuels. The economics of renewables, though, have helped them generate a greater share of energy. (…)

“Even though there’s plenty of hurdles for renewables coming out of DC, we’re coming out of four years where there weren’t a lot of hurdles.” (…)

image

While it was a good year for renewables, the surge in energy demand from data centers, electric vehicles and industry also boosted power generated from fossil fuels. That includes a 13% increase in electricity generated from coal. The Trump administration has also supported fossil fuel production and use with grants and orders to delay plant closures. (…)

Even without subsidies, renewable installations are now cheaper to build than alternatives in most scenarios, according to Lazard.

That’s reflected in the pipeline for future US energy installations. Nearly 80% of the power plant capacity planned to be added over roughly the next decade is tied to renewable sources, according to filings with federal regulators and grid operators compiled by Cleanview.co, an energy data company.

Amanda Levin, director of policy analysis at the Natural Resources Defense Council, said the pace of green energy construction may actually accelerate as utilities race to beat deadlines for expiring federal incentives.

The government estimates that 93% of new generation capacity expected to be added to the grid this year will come from wind, solar and batteries. That sets renewables up to generate an increasingly large percentage of all US power. Wood Mackenzie expects renewables, including hydroelectric power, to account for nearly one in three US electrons by 2030.

“The only technologies to be deployed today at scale and at cost are wind, solar and battery storage,” Levin said. “No matter what Trump tries to do, he’s not going to see this resurgence of fossil fuels.”

Anthropic Refuses Pentagon’s Proposal to Loosen AI Guardrails Decision comes ahead of Friday deadline to reach an agreement or face tough government measures

Anthropic said it wouldn’t back down in a dispute with the Defense Department over artificial-intelligence guardrails, complicating efforts to reach a compromise ahead of a Friday deadline.

In a Tuesday meeting at the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth gave Anthropic Chief Executive Dario Amodei until 5:01 p.m. Friday to agree to the military’s right to use the technology in all lawful cases. If Anthropic declines, Hegseth has threatened to invoke the Defense Production Act to make the company do what the military wants, or to designate the company a supply-chain risk, impairing its ability to work with other government contractors.

Anthropic has refused to accept the military’s proposal and doesn’t let users deploy its Claude models in scenarios involving mass domestic surveillance or autonomous weapons.

Amodei reiterated the company’s red lines in a public statement Thursday. “We cannot in good conscience accede to their request,” he said. The company said the military’s latest proposal would effectively undo those guardrails. (…)

Designating the company a supply-chain risk and invoking the Defense Production Act would be a nearly unprecedented escalation against a U.S. company, AI and security experts said. The threats “are inherently contradictory: one labels us a security risk; the other labels Claude as essential to national security,” Amodei said in his statement.

The threats have highlighted the Pentagon’s dependence on Anthropic. It was the only company with approval for use in classified settings before the Defense Department agreed to approve Elon Musk’s xAI, which agreed to the Pentagon’s use of its AI in all lawful scenarios.

Google and ChatGPT maker OpenAI are also used by the Pentagon in unclassified settings and talking to the Defense Department about potential approval for classified work.

An online petition began circulating late Thursday signed by employees of both companies asking them to take the same approach as Anthropic in negotiations with the Pentagon regarding autonomous weapons and mass surveillance.

New Credit Blowup in London Has Wall Street Chasing Billions

As Market Financial Solutions Ltd. hurtled toward collapse in London, the setting was new, but the themes felt familiar.

Like US auto lender Tricolor Holdings, MFS was a nonbank finance firm looking to fill a gap that major banks had ignored or shunned, while tapping those Wall Street giants for the cash to do it. And like auto parts supplier First Brands Group, the banks took comfort in tangible collateral, only for accusations of double-pledging to rattle that assurance.

Even some of the names were the same: Banco Santander SA and Jefferies Financial Group Inc. — both stung by First Brands in recent months — are once again scrambling to recoup whatever money they can from an embattled company. This time, they’re alongside the likes of Apollo Global Management Inc.’s Atlas SP Partners, Barclays Plc, Wells Fargo & Co. and Castlelake LP. (…)

The saga risks becoming the latest multibillion-dollar collapse to saddle major banks with writedowns amid allegations of fraud. As MFS unraveled into a UK form of insolvency Wednesday, some entities within the firm claimed in court filings that they were seeing “serious irregularities” and a “significant shortfall” in their collateral. That contrasted with the company’s Saturday statement blaming an “impasse that has temporarily limited our access to everyday banking facilities.”

While the overall corporate default rate has remained stable despite economic and geopolitical concerns, credit markets have been spooked by a spate of so-called cockroaches, as JPMorgan Chase & Co. boss Jamie Dimon dubbed them last year. He followed that up with a warning this week that he’s starting to see parallels between today’s markets and the era before the 2008 financial crisis. (…)

Titans of finance have waged a war of words this week over the health of corporates more broadly, especially in the world of private credit where Blue Owl Capital Inc.’s decision to halt quarterly withdrawals from one of its retail funds rattled investors and sparked a selloff in the shares of asset managers. A business development company overseen by Apollo lowered its quarterly payout and wrote down its portfolio by about 3%.

Some of the biggest players in private credit, though, have argued that many of the high profile blowups of late involved lending by banks rather than private markets firms.

Others, however, see reasons for the market jitters: Marathon Asset Management Chairman Bruce Richards likened the dangers facing software firms — which have binged on tens of billions of dollars in debt in recent years even as artificial intelligence threatened to eat away large swaths of their business — to “a train coming down the tracks that you could see from some distance.”

“It wasn’t a matter of if, it was just a matter of when,” he said. “The markets have just woken up.”

(…) Investors fear that risks in the software sector, along with problems in private credit — a key funding source for technology firms — may upset the relative calm seen in public debt markets. Just last month, spreads hit multi-decade lows. Earlier this week, UBS Group AG credit strategists said private credit default rates could climb to as high as 15% if AI sparks an “aggressive” disruption among corporate borrowers. (…)

(…) KKR’s FSK fund oversees a $13bn portfolio, mostly of loans made to private-equity-backed midsized companies during a record wave of takeover activity over the past decade. (…)

Private equity firms are sitting on a growing $4tn logjam of unsold deals, according to consultancy Bain & Co, with many facing an unclear path to exit these holdings. Many of these companies have high levels of debt and some are falling into distress.

FSK’s portfolio was hit by large markdowns in the fourth quarter on debt extended to software companies. The fund’s holdings in debt tied to janitorial services groups, and so-called roll-ups of dental clinics, veterinarians groups and defence contractors also saw markdowns.

The vehicle said its net investment income fell to 48 cents a share in the fourth quarter, from 57 cents in the third quarter. (…)

Everyone Else Is Trading Without Us Tariffs have made the U.S. so unpredictable that our usual partners are looking elsewhere to make deals.

Economics 101 teaches that international trade is all about comparative advantage. People specialize in whatever they do best and trade for the rest, which results in everyone getting more of everything. While that theory is still true, it no longer guides global trade. Instead, what’s happening looks more like portfolio theory. Countries are no longer maneuvering to maximize gains. They’re diversifying to minimize losses. The risk they’re hedging against? The U.S.

While trade policy debates fixate on tariff rates and who pays, companies around the world are rerouting capital and effort to bypass the most unpredictable major economy on earth. Are tariffs here for the long haul or a fleeting fancy? Will exemptions be honored going forward? Business and political leaders around the world have to ponder these questions because a factory that takes years to build and pay for can’t be packed up and moved every time the White House discovers a new grievance.

Coercive diplomacy might produce the occasional headline-grabbing concession. But leverage decreases when partners have alternatives. India’s deal with Europe was a direct response to U.S. tariffs on India whipsawing from 26% to 50% and finally back to 18% in less than a year. Europe’s regulatory machine is slow and bureaucratic, but for long-term decisions, slow and predictable is preferable to fast and erratic. When Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney refers to China as “more predictable” than the U.S., it’s a sign that something has gone deeply wrong with U.S. trade policy.

Domestically, the consensus is cracking. The House voted 219-211 to end tariffs on Canada, with six Republicans crossing the aisle. More than 60% of Americans disapprove of the tariffs. The Supreme Court ruled against the president’s use of emergency powers to justify tariffs, but the White House has been announcing new ones.

Adam Smith understood that protectionism creates perverse incentives. But even he might have underestimated its most expensive cost: the destruction of trust. A factory built in India’s state of Gujarat to serve European markets won’t relocate to Texas if the next administration softens on trade.

The world isn’t deglobalizing. It’s reglobalizing around partners who commit to rules rather than those who wield tariffs like a club. The long-term cost of these tariffs isn’t measured in revenue collected. It’s measured in partnerships formed without us and the rise of a trading system that no longer needs U.S. participation to function.

32 million watched Trump’s State of the Union address

More than 32 million people watched President Trump’s State of the Union address Tuesday night, down from the roughly 36 million that tuned in to last year’s address to a joint session of Congress.

It’s also down significantly from the 45 million that tuned in to his address in 2018 during the second year of his first term.

A line graph displaying the viewership of State of the Union addresses from 1994 to 2026, including joint session addresses. Viewership peaked at over 60 million during Clinton

Data: Nielsen. Chart: Sara Wise/Axios

The vast majority of those that did tune in on live television Tuesday (72%) were people over 55-years-old, per Nielsen.

Axios’ story does not say how many made it through the 108-minute long speech… Sleepy smile

YOUR DAILY EDGE: 26 February 2026

The State of AI

Nvidia Beats Back Bubble Fears With Record $68 Billion in Sales in Fourth Quarter ‘Computing has changed,’ CEO Jensen Huang says, citing agentic AI as driver of 94% profit surge

(…) Data center hardware—the chips and networking equipment that Nvidia sells to AI and cloud-computing companies—accounted for 91.4% of the quarter’s sales, or $62.3 billion, and the segment’s revenue grew slightly faster than the company’s overall sales.

“The simple way to think about it is, computing has changed,” Nvidia Chief Executive Jensen Huang said on Wednesday’s earnings call with investors. “In this new world of AI, compute equals revenues…I am certain at this point that we’ve reached the inflection point” where agentic AI is upending how business is done worldwide and selling AI tools is starting to generate real profits. (…)

A factor that will likely shape Nvidia’s fortunes will be the transition from AI-model training to inference, the process by which AI tools respond to queries. Training and inference require different types of computing, and as a result, different hardware.

Nvidia has for years dominated the training market with its graphics processors, known as GPUs—powerful chips capable of performing billions of simple tasks simultaneously. As more tech companies deploy AI tools in the real world, demand is expected to shift from training to inference, which relies more heavily on central processing units, or CPUs, a simpler type of data-center chip that more companies are capable of designing.

Last week, Nvidia announced a partnership with Meta that included its first major deployment of CPUs that aren’t connected in servers to GPUs, a sign that customers such as Meta need more inference-computing infrastructure to run their AI tools and other applications.

“It’s important to understand that inference equals revenues for our customers now,” Huang said. “As AI agents come into wider use, being able to quickly generate the computing tokens needed to operate them, customers have realized that their capital spending on Nvidia’s products leads to faster growth.” (…)

Nvidia said Wednesday that it expected $78 billion in revenue in the current quarter, significantly higher than the $72.9 billion predicted by analysts, and gross margins of 75%, slightly higher than Wall Street’s prediction. (…)

  • Even CEOs worry about AI (Axios)

Fortune 500 CEOs ranked AI and “new technology” as the top risk to their industry, in a survey out this morning. (…)

A line chart showing the share of Fortune 500 CEOs who say select risks will have a high impact on their industry quarterly from Q2 2024 to Q1 2026. The top risks in the most recent survey were AI (60%), geopolitical (59%), cyber (56%), financial (50%) and legal/regulatory (43%). AI jumped from the third riskiest issue to the first since Q4 2025.Data: Conference Board and Business Council. Chart: Jacque Schrag/Axios

Your business can now get knocked off its axis by all manner of doomsday content. A viral report, a post on X or even an announcement by a former karaoke company turned trucking firm can send a stock a tumblin’.

AI or new technology was identified as a top concern by 60% of the 142 CEOs surveyed in early February by the Conference Board, a nonpartisan think tank, and the Business Council, an association of CEOs.

  • It ranked third the previous quarter. At the end of 2025, geopolitical risk was the top concern (59%), followed by “cyber” (56%) and AI (53%).
  • Since the Conference Board started asking CEOs about AI in 2024, this marks the first time the technology topped the list.

AI isn’t making the CEOs feel that bad, to be sure. CEO confidence overall jumped into positive territory from the previous quarter, rising 11 points to a score of 59 (anything above 50 is positive).

  • In the last three months of 2025, Nvidia was name-checked in 234 earnings calls, up from 160 over the same period the previous year.
A column chart that shows quarterly mentions of

Data: AlphaSense. Note: Excludes Nvidia’s own investment calls. Chart: Axios Visuals

The $130 Billion Race for Companies to Get Their Tariff Money Back At least 1,800 companies have filed lawsuits seeking refunds from the government, following the Supreme Court’s tariff ruling last week

(…) Through Dec. 10, at least 301,000 importers were subject to the tariffs that were ultimately struck down, Customs and Border Protection officials said in a court filing. That total likely includes many businesses, but also some individuals who paid tariffs directly on goods purchased overseas, lawyers have said.

The task of handling the cases is falling to the Court of International Trade, a specialized New York City-based federal trade court that has plenty of experience with matters like this—though none of them have involved as many potential litigants or a price tag of this magnitude. (…)

In filings in one of the cases that ultimately went to the Supreme Court, the administration’s lawyers assured lower courts that companies could be “made whole through a refund, including interest” if the tariffs were ultimately ruled unlawful.

On Friday, an angry Trump criticized the justices for not including a clear directive in their opinion and told a reporter asking him if the administration planned to issue refunds: “It’s not discussed. We’ll end up being in court for the next five years.”

In a Sunday appearance on Fox News, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the administration would look to the lower court for guidance. “It’s out of our hands, since it’s in the court, and we will follow the court’s orders,” he said. (…)

In lawyers’ optimistic assessments, it could take as little as a year, or two. Pessimistic guesses run considerably longer. (…)

Not everyone is willing to take the step of going to court. Kimberly Daniels, a Washington, D.C.-based customs broker at Mercantile Logistics & International Trade, said 20 of her clients are looking to get refunds of $2,200 to $7 million each in the tariffs at issue. Of those, only the largest, publicly traded firm was able to file a case; the others don’t have the financial resources to hire lawyers. (…)

(…) The refunds, on top of remaining and forthcoming tariffs, will thus surely become a political issue between now and the midterm elections in November. If Trump had any sense he would be ostentatiously pushing them through quickly, perhaps even labelling them a tariff dividend and hoping no one notices it’s not exactly the one he promised.

But although his administration has been reducing tariffs either through negotiation or unilaterally, Trump himself apparently simply cannot grasp quite how unpopular they have become.

Another potential source of friction is the mismatch between who in effect bore the cost of the tariffs and those who will get the refund. The money is handed back to the “importer of record” which paid them, but if that is a consumer-facing company — or indeed a wholesaler — which passed the cost on to its customers, the latter might feel they are morally if not legally owed money back. (…)

There may be even more righteous anger to come. Ryan Petersen, chief executive of the global logistics technology company Flexport, which is also offering a tariff refund service, says the US is very unusual in allowing foreign companies straightforwardly to act as importers of record. Flexport says their analysis of customs data suggests that the share of trade with China accounted for by Chinese importers of record jumped from 9 per cent before “liberation day” in April 2025 to 20 per cent by the end of the year. 

Petersen says this reflects Chinese companies giving themselves the ability to misvalue imports to reduce tariff costs. It also means that the US government, while letting consumers take the hit, will be shelling out billions of dollars to a rising number of Chinese companies who are aggressively targeting the US market.

This will be extraordinarily bad optics. Trump always said that Chinese companies would pay the tariffs. In economic terms, this has largely turned out to be wrong, as the cost of duties has been passed on to domestic producers and consumers. But in an administrative sense it seems to have been increasingly correct. 

If you had to precision-design a policy to showcase the Trump administration’s shortcomings, the IEEPA tariff saga would be it. It’s an illegal duty based on wrong-headed economics, it was ineptly designed and incompetently administered, sulkily reversed under belated legal duress and is giving a windfall to exactly the people it was designed to punish. It would take a heart of stone not to laugh, but it’s unlikely American consumers and voters will appreciate the joke.

Americans Are Leaving the U.S. in Record Numbers

In its 250th year, is America, land of immigration, becoming a country of emigration?

Last year the U.S. experienced something that hasn’t definitively occurred since the Great Depression: More people moved out than moved in. The Trump administration has hailed the exodus—negative net migration—as the fulfillment of its promise to ramp up deportations and restrict new visas. Beneath the stormy optics of that immigration crackdown, however, lies a less-noticed reversal: America’s own citizens are leaving in record numbers, replanting themselves and their families in lands they find more affordable and safe.

Since the Eisenhower administration, the U.S. hasn’t collected comprehensive statistics on the number of citizens leaving. Yet data on residence permits, foreign home purchases, student enrollments and other metrics from more than 50 countries show that Americans are voting with their feet to an unprecedented degree. A millions-strong diaspora is studying, telecommuting and retiring overseas. (…)

More than 100,000 young students are enrolled abroad for a more affordable university degree. In nursing homes mushrooming across the Mexican border, elderly Americans are turning up for low-cost care.

On a conference call last month hosted by Expatsi, a relocation company, almost 400 Americans signed up to learn how to move to Albania. The former Stalinist state offers a special visa allowing U.S. citizens to live and work there, with no tax on foreign income for a year, no questions asked.

“Previously, the Americans leaving were super-adventurous and well-credentialed,” said Expatsi founder Jen Barnett, a 54-year-old Alabama native who moved to Yucatán, Mexico, in 2024.

“Now they’re ordinary people, like me,” she said as she ticked through growth numbers. In 2024 the company organized three group scouting trips for clients; this year it will be 57, she said: “Our goal is to move one million Americans.” (…)

The U.S. experienced net negative migration—an estimated loss of some 150,000 people—in 2025, and the outflow will likely increase in 2026, according to calculations by the Brookings Institution, a public-policy think tank. The number could be larger or smaller because official U.S. data doesn’t yet fully capture the number of people leaving, Brookings analysts noted. The total in-migration was between around 2.6 and 2.7 million in 2025, down from a peak of almost 6 million in 2023.

The U.S. saw 675,000 deportations and 2.2 million “self-deportations” last year, according to data from the Department of Homeland Security.

A Wall Street Journal analysis of 15 countries providing full or partial 2025 data showed that at least 180,000 Americans joined them—a number likely to be far higher when other countries report full statistics. (…)

Relocation agencies say their new clients go far beyond young adventurers on European sojourns or their retiring parents. They include Midwestern small-business owners—architects, financial advisers and engineers—saving on healthcare costs by living seven time zones east of their clients. Middle-aged divorcées are looking for a fresh start and Americans on disability or social security are trying to stretch their benefits. (…)

Across dozens of interviews, U.S. expats described their motivations as a tangle of economic incentives, lifestyle preferences and disenchantment with the trajectory of America, citing violent crime, cost of living and turbulent politics. Trump’s re-election was a factor for many—although others voted for him. But the structural and societal shift runs much deeper. When Gallup asked Americans during the 2008 recession how many wanted to leave the U.S., the answer was one in 10. Last year: One in five. (…)

The number of U.S.-based academics seeking jobs overseas rose by more than a fifth last year, according to Times Higher Education, a U.K.-based provider of global education data. Most of them landed in Europe, where the EU has set aside 500 million euros to lure top scientists to the continent. Professors teaching abroad blamed the American right for slashing research funding, and the left for policing university speech.

International students coming to America fell by 17% last fall and is expected to decline more quickly in years to come—while the cohort of Americans obtaining a degree in Europe has doubled from 2011, rising 14% last year alone in the U.K., according to UCAS, the British university admissions service. (…)

Of the 12 American students the Journal spoke to for this story, studying across Spain, Scotland and England, only one planned to return to the U.S. (…)

Winking smile Elsewhere in the WSJ:

“Breaking: Statue of Liberty reportedly spotted swimming back across the Atlantic. Said she ‘preferred the original terms and conditions,’” French Response replied in January to a pro-Trump account on X that had said France could be conquered “as an after thought” following a U.S. takeover of Greenland and Canada.

If there’s one single consistent advantage the United States has carried since its founding, it is its ability to draw talent and expand its population. Now, as the country prepares to celebrate its 250th birthday and ponders its appetite for President Donald Trump’s crackdown on immigration, the US risks recording a historic and economic milestone decades ahead of schedule: Based on at least one respected estimate, 2026 may see the first real population decline in American history.

Even if that milestone doesn’t happen this year, there’s broad agreement among experts on both sides of the immigration debate that Trump’s second term is hastening a critical point — when net migration into the US stops offsetting the declining births and rising deaths that come with an aging native-born population. The more Trump cracks down on immigration, the sooner the US population plateaus or even shrinks.

A country’s population is an essential element of its economic mass. The shrinking population of China, which in 2025 recorded its lowest birth rate since Communist rule began in 1949, is one good reason it may never overtake the US as the world’s largest economy. Japan’s population peaked at 128 million in 2010, and its decline has dragged on growth for years. Europe’s worsening demographics have long fed its narrative of economic malaise.

The US has for years mostly stood apart from that conversation. In 2023, when the US Census last issued long-run forecasts for the population, the main prediction was that it would decline for the first time in 2081. But the way things are going, this year the US is at best poised to record a lower population growth rate than Germany, where an aging population has contributed to its reputation as the “sick man of Europe.” (…)

In the year prior to July 1, 2025, the US Census revealed this week that the population grew by only 0.5%, or 1.8 million people, its lowest growth since the pandemic. The main cause for the significant slowdown was a collapse in net migration to 1.3 million from a peak of 2.7 million in the year prior to July 2024.

In that most recent period, there were 519,000 more births than deaths, according to the new Census figures. That surplus is shrinking, however. By 2030 it’s likely to disappear altogether, making the US entirely dependent on immigration for population growth, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. (…)

Recent work by researchers at the center-right American Enterprise Institute and center-left Brookings Institution suggests the US is already experiencing net negative migration. Diving into the data available on inflows and outflows of both legal and undocumented foreign-born workers, they calculated in a recent analysis that the US had a net decline in the immigrant population of 10,000 to 295,000 in all of 2025. That would still imply a tiny net increase in the overall population.

It’s this year, though, where the AEI/Brookings team’s estimate gets more interesting. They predict the US will have net immigration somewhere between a gain of 185,000 and a decline of 925,000 in 2026 — a prediction made before the US announced yet more new restrictions on legal migration at the start of the year.

The biggest contributor to the slowdown in net migration, the authors said, has been a reduction in new arrivals rather than the high-profile deportations now receiving media attention.

The AEI/Brooking researchers don’t go further and look at the overall effect on the population, but they acknowledge the math. If the low end of their 2026 prediction comes true and birth rates don’t spike in an unprecedented way, the US would have a decline of more than 400,000 in its overall population. Even at the midrange of that forecast, the country is at least flirting with a population decline. It seems increasingly possible that in 2026 “we could be at around zero or negative on population,” says Tara Watson, who directs the Brookings Center for Economic Security & Opportunity and is one of the study’s co-authors.

Since the US began taking censuses in 1790, such a decline has never been recorded, according to demographers. (…)

The Trump administration, meanwhile, has seized on other maximalist estimates, pointing to a decline of as many as 2 million people in the foreign-born labor force and claiming to have deported 622,000 people in 2025. If either is true, then the US population is likely already shrinking. Experts, though, have been challenging those claims, calling the first a misreading of the statistics and the second an overstatement. (…)

There were around 14 million undocumented immigrants living in the US before Trump’s deportation campaign began. That means, in principle at least, that a US committed to large-scale deportations and little or no immigration could see its population shrink multiple years in a row.

Still, some are holding out hope for a broader immigration compromise. Trump signaled this week that he was ready to talk after the uproar over ICE shootings in Minnesota spread into Republican ranks. Congress could, at some point, also wake up and tackle comprehensive immigration reform, however unlikely that currently seems. In a country with a foreign-born population of some 50 million people and growing worker shortages, proponents argue it only makes sense.

Republican Representative María Elvira Salazar of Florida, the author and co-sponsor of a bill that would allow millions of undocumented workers in the US to remain — albeit without the promise of citizenship — argues that Trump is uniquely positioned to shepherd a compromise. “He is a guy that comes from construction and hospitality,” Salazar said at a Brookings event in January. “He knows that we need those hands.” (…)

An AI Productivity Boom? Don’t Count Your (Productivity Data) Chickens

The three P’s of GDP growth

  • Population 
  • Participation (proportion of the population actually working)
  • Productivity

From Yale’s Budget lab:

If economic growth is strong and job growth is weak, some would tell us we are in the middle of a productivity boom with the promised benefits (and perils) of AI upon us!

But we shouldn’t be so fast to jump to conclusions as economic data is never that simple. We may in fact be seeing a productivity boom. But that is still to be determined. If we are seeing it, it is still unclear why.

image

There are three reasons why what we are seeing may not actually be a real jump in productivity—or an irreconcilable gap between economic growth and job growth.

First, productivity is noisy data (as you can see in the chart above) and this is an important point we must recognize at the offset. We shouldn’t overreact to one or even two quarters of data. Looking over several quarters, we can see that productivity growth has averaged about 2.2%. That is strong, but not unusually so (about where we were headed into the pandemic).

The noise in productivity is partly due to how it’s measured: productivity is what’s “left over” after all the other inputs have been accounted for (the residual). In other words, productivity growth includes both actual productivity and any measurement error. That’s why most economists prefer to look at it over a longer period of time.

Second, jobs growth in 2025 was quite low. We know that because we just got the annual revisions for the establishment survey (where jobs data comes from) which lowered the number of jobs we added in 2025—a totally typical part of the measurement process.

But for GDP growth in 2025, we’re still waiting for two things: 1) the advance, second, and third estimate for the fourth quarter in 2025 and 2) the annual benchmark revision for GDP which will occur in July. Note that any comparison of jobs data and GDP data for 2025 is comparing revised jobs data to unrevised and incomplete GDP data.

Third, jobs growth in 2025 was, as said, quite low. But GDP data has been weird in 2025 partly because of policy and behavioral swings around trade. If you look at job growth relative to private-domestic final purchases (PDFP, what economists sometimes refer to as “core GDP”, which strips out some of these sources of volatility, and is a better predictor of future GDP growth than GDP itself), it is still low, but not as low as it is relative to the GDP data.

It should be said that even if you trust the productivity data, and think we are seeing an increase in productivity, there are other explanations besides AI.

First, productivity can rise in response to compositional issues (see discussion from Ernie Tedeschi and Callum Williams). In the graph above, you can see productivity rising dramatically during Covid (and less dramatically in 2009). Did we all become more productive when we were stuck at home and others couldn’t go to work at all? You may be shocked to hear that we did not. Instead, since the people who lost their jobs were disproportionately low-wage workers (who show up as lower productivity in the data), productivity rose due to a compositional effect. (A similar thing happened in 2009).

One reason job growth in 2025 was so low was because of changes in immigration policy. If the people being removed from the labor force were lower productivity workers, that will show up as an increase in productivity even though the productivity of the workers who remain behind has not changed. In fact, the same thing skewing job growth down may be skewing productivity growth up.

Second, if you look at the productivity data, it appears that much of the boost is coming from capital utilization due to increased productive investment. That would be consistent with an increase in productivity due to AI. But its important to distinguish at this point it is people investing in AI not people becoming more productive by using AI.

Could this be the beginnings of an AI productivity boom? Maybe! But this is not the data we should hang our hat on.

If productivity growth swings back in the next reading (for the quarter of 2025), that shouldn’t make us assume that there are no productivity impacts of AI, and vice versa. Productivity is one of the most important economic concepts and also one of the hardest to measure—particularly in real time. We’ll have better luck tracking measures like real wage growth and changes in occupational composition to give us a signal.

But until we get a clear signal one way or the other—we shouldn’t put all our eggs in the productivity data release basket.

Also discussed in Fear the Fear