world
CNBC Daily Open: Tesla's increased costs outweighed its revenue growth
Tesla’s revenue rose 12% year on year, the first increase in three quarters. Despite that, net income plunged 37% from a year earlier. Source link
Bank of Korea holds rate at 2.5% as tighter property rules kick in
South Korea’s central bank kept its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 2.5% for the fourth consecutive meeting. Source link
Asia-Pacific markets fall, tracking Wall Street declines on concerns over U.S.-China trade relations
Trade fears resurfaced after Reuters reported that the Trump administration is considering curbs on exports to China that are made with U.S. software. Source link
Brent crude jumps about 5% after Trump administration sanctions big Russian oil companies
The new sanctions are related to plans for a meeting between President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin being dropped. Source link
Trump says U.S. cattle ranchers 'don't understand' tariffs after some slam Argentine beef plan
President Donald Trump said U.S. cattle ranchers “don’t understand” how they have benefitted from his tariffs, adding that they “have to get their prices down.” Source link
Tesla earnings are out – here are the numbers
Tesla has returned to favor on Wall Street after a brutal start to the year. Source link
Amazon introduces 'Blue Jay' warehouse robot that performs multiple tasks at once
The robotics system is called Blue Jay, and Amazon said it’s already being deployed in one of its South Carolina warehouses. Source link
The biggest crypto wipeout was led not by bitcoin, but much smaller tokens. Here's what happened
More than 1.6 million traders suffered a combined $19.37 billion erasure of leveraged positions over a 24-hour period beginning Friday, Oct. 10. Source link
Government shutdown becomes 2nd longest in U.S. history
Democrats want President Donald Trump to get involved in shutdown negotiations. Senate Majority Leader John Thune says, “Open up the government first.” Source link
AI is already taking white-collar jobs. Economists warn there's 'much more in the tank'
Across banking, the auto sector and retail, executives are warning employees and investors that AI is taking over jobs. Source link