Business was abuzz with AI action on Monday following an eventful weekend for OpenAI founder Sam Altman, as news eked out the tech chief has landed a job at Microsoft (MSFT).
Over the weekend, the board of OpenAI — the company that created ChatGPT — ousted Altman, saying the founder “was not consistently candid in his communications with the board”. It was rumoured Altman would return to his position after he posted a photo wearing an OpenAI guest pass on social media, but that wasn’t to be.
Satya Nadella, Microsoft CEO, said on Monday that Altman will join his company instead to lead a new AI research team.
Reports this morning suggest that OpenAI will name Emmett Shear as its interim chief executive.
Microsoft stock was up 2.2% in premarket trade.
In the UK, stocks were moving as investors anticipate a fresh raft of economic policy decisions in the Autumn statement on Wednesday.
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The FTSE 100 (^FTSE) fell 0.3% by mid-morning in London and Germany’s DAX (^GDAXI) dropped 0.2%. Meanwhile, France’s CAC (^FCHI) rose 0.2%.
Data this morning showed German producer prices down 11% — but policy decisions remain unchanged.
“It would be unwise to start cutting interest rates too soon,” Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel said on Friday. “We must not loosen policy until we are absolutely certain of returning to price stability on a lasting basis.”
US stock futures are broadly flat going into Thanksgiving week, with the dollar pulling further into the red after falling on Friday.
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GBP gives mixed signals
The pound continued to fall against the euro (GBPEUR=X) on Monday hitting its lowest level in just over six months. The move followed inflation data released last week which showed a dip, alongside retail sales data for October which showed a contraction of -0.3%. Sales growth was expected to come in at 0.5%.
Sterling is currently trading at about 1.14EUR.
Despite this fall, there was still strength against the dollar, hovering around its highest point in a month on Monday in London, rising towards the $1.25 mark. The pound had dipped against the dollar last week based on the aforementioned data releases.
As the FTSE tips into the red, here are the top risers and fallers of the week so far:
Up
Diploma (DPLM.L) 6.6% — up on the back of reporting organic growth of 8%.
Spirax Sarco Engineering (SPX.L) 2.3%
Halma (HLMA.L) 1.7%
Down
Ashstead Group (AHT.L) 11.6% — the equipment rental company lost ground on the back of Hollywood strikes and fewer natural disasters.
Compass Group (CPG.L) 4.8%
AstraZeneca (AZN.L) 1.8%
The OpenAI story is developing in real-time:
Overnight in Asia
Asian stocks were mixed on Monday, with China-based stocks rising and equities in Japan pulling back.
The Hang Seng (^HSI) rose 1.6%, while the SSE Composite (000001.SS) gained 0.5% on the back of promises from the Chinese government for stimulus and support for its beleaguered property sector.
The Nikkei (^N225) finished 0.6% lower after briefly peaking at a 33-year high. Car manufacturers including Mazda led the decline on the stronger yen. The Nikkei has gained about 28% this year so far.
Good morning from London! At Yahoo Finance UK we’re all getting ready for the Autumn statement, as the government preps to trot out its economic pledges on Wednesday. Over the weekend we learned the government has made its decision on whether to cut benefits in real terms. Papers are asking whether we are on the brink of a real tax cut.
With that in mind, let’s get to it.
Watch: No immediate return to OpenAI for Sam Altman as he lands Microsoft job
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