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What can you expect at today’s DealBook Summit?

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On Wednesday, DealBook will be live and in person at our annual summit in New York.

Andrew takes the stage around 9:00 am Eastern, and the first interview begins shortly after. The DealBook team and reporters from The Times will report live from the conference.

This is possible even if you are not with us follow along here starts at 8:30 am Eastern.

These are the speakers:

  • Deputy Director Kamala Harris

  • Elon Muskthe chairman and CEO of SpaceX, the CEO of Tesla and the chairman and chief technology officer of X

  • Tsai Ingwenthe president of Taiwan

  • Lina Khanthe chairman of the Federal Trade Commission

  • Jamie Dimonthe chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase

  • Bob Igerthe CEO of Disney

  • Representative Kevin McCarthyRepublican of California

  • Jensen Huangthe CEO of Nvidia

  • David Zaslavthe CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery

  • Shonda Rhimesthe creator of the television show and the founder of the Shondaland production company

  • Jay Monahanthe commissioner of the PGA Tour

What to watch: The buzz and fears swirling around artificial intelligence, the rise of hate speech and anti-Semitism since the October 7 Hamas-led attacks on Israel, China-US relations, inflation, interest rates and the chip and streaming wars – these topics and more will be covered by Andrew as he interviews some of the biggest newsmakers in business, politics and culture.

There will be plenty of questions about an uncertain world. Americans are lagging behind in politics, economics, and workplace conditions. College campuses are divided. What role does the business community play in addressing these complaints? What about the White House and Congress? Can they bring voters together? Speaking of which, can Republicans unite to prevent the government from shutting down again (and again)?

Can Beijing and Washington reduce tensions elsewhere and restore more normalized trade ties? What about AI? Is this a technology that will unleash a new wave of productivity, or is it a force that could cause irreparable damage? And what’s so special about colonizing Mars?

More about what to expect later.

Charlie Munger, Warren Buffett’s longtime lieutenant, dies at age 99. A former lawyer turned vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway and a billionaire himself, he became known for his sardonic jokes. But Munger had more influence than his title suggests: Buffett credited him with Berkshire’s famous approach of buying high-performing companies at low prices, making the company one of the most successful conglomerates in history.

The Koch Network endorses Nikki Haley. The political network, founded by billionaire industrialists Charles and David Koch, could give Haley’s campaign organizational and financial muscle in the fight against Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and her goals. to close the gap with the Republican frontrunner, Donald Trump. Haley has risen in the polls since the first Republican primary debate in August, while DeSantis has slipped.

Apple is reportedly taking steps to terminate its credit card pact with Goldman Sachs. In the latest blow to Goldman’s consumer finance ambitions, the tech giant has proposed to pull the plug on a credit card and savings account it introduced at the bank, according to The Wall Street Journal. It’s unclear whether Apple has found a new partner to issue its Apple Card, although Goldman had previously discussed a deal to transfer the program to American Express.

Mark Cuban makes two exits. The billionaire entrepreneur will leaves “Shark Tank” after more than 10 years of reviewing startup pitches and closing deals on camera. And according to The Athletic, so is Cuban the sale of a majority stake in the Dallas Mavericks to casino billionaire Miriam Adelson and her family for a valuation of approximately $3.5 billion. (He retains full control of basketball operations.)

Vice President Kamala Harris


Elon Musk, SpaceX, Tesla and X


Lina Khan, FTC


Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chase


Jensen Huang, Nvidia

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