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Korea’s president vows to revive democracy from ‘near demise’

SOUTH KOREA’S President Lee Jae-myung delivers a speech after taking his oath during his inauguration ceremony at the National Assembly in Seoul on June 4, 2025. — REUTERS

SEOUL — South Korea’s new liberal President Lee Jae-myung pledged on Wednesday to raise the country from the near destruction caused by a martial law attempt and revive an economy besieged by global protectionism that is threatening its very existence.

Mr. Lee’s decisive victory in Tuesday’s snap election stands to usher in a sea change in Asia’s fourth-largest economy, after backlash against a botched attempt at military rule brought down Yoon Suk Yeol just three years into his troubled presidency.

He faces what could be the most daunting set of challenges for a South Korean leader in nearly three decades, ranging from healing a country deeply scarred by the martial law attempt to tackling unpredictable protectionist moves by the United States, a major trading partner and a security ally.

“A Lee Jae-myung government will be a pragmatic pro-market government,” he said after taking the oath of office at parliament, a location where six months ago he jumped over the perimeter wall to enter the chamber and avoid martial law troops barricading it to vote down the decree.

He promised deregulation to spur innovation and growth in business and pledged to reopen dialogue with North Korea while maintaining a strong security alliance with the United States and bringing balance to diplomacy.

“It is better to win without fighting than to win in a fight, and peace with no need to fight is the best security,” he said on the country’s often violent ties with rival North Korea.

Mr. Lee was officially confirmed earlier as president by the National Election Commission and immediately assumed the powers of the presidency and commander-in-chief, speaking with the top military leader to receive a report on defense posture.

With all the ballots counted, Mr. Lee won 49.42% of the nearly 35 million votes cast while conservative rival Kim Moon-soo took 41.15% in the polls that brought the highest turnout for a presidential election since 1997, official data showed.

Mr. Lee has said he would address urgent economic challenges facing the country on the first day in office with a focus on the cost-of-living concerns affecting middle and low-income families and the struggles of small business owners.

“With democracy alive, I hope the president will revive the economy, and have consideration for underprivileged citizens and small business owners,” said Kim Eun-kyung, 58, a Seoul resident.

The new president also faces a deadline set by the White House on negotiating import duties that Washington has blamed for a large trade imbalance between the countries.

South Korean stocks rallied on Wednesday, with the benchmark KOSPI rising more than 2% to a 10-month high, with the financial sector leading the gain on expectations of market reform by Mr. Lee. Renewable energy stocks also rose. Mr. Lee has pledged a shift to a greener energy mix.

‘DEAL WITH TRUMP’
In a bid to fill a long-running power vacuum, Lee nominated Kim Min-seok, a four-time lawmaker, as his prime minister on Tuesday.

Mr. Kim made waves when he predicted in August last year that Mr. Yoon may declare martial law, roughly three months before Mr. Yoon’s short-lived decree to impose martial law.

The government under a caretaker acting president had made little progress in trying to assuage crushing tariffs announced by US President Donald J. Trump that would hit some of the country’s major industries, including autos and steel.

“President Lee will find himself with little to no time to spare before tackling the most important task of his early presidency: reaching a deal with Trump,” the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies said.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio congratulated Mr. Lee on his election win and said the countries “share an ironclad commitment” to their alliance grounded on shared values, and deep economic ties.

The White House said the election of Lee was “free and fair” but the United States remained concerned and opposed to Chinese interference and influence in democracies around the world, according to a White House official.

Mr. Lee has expressed more conciliatory plans for ties with China and North Korea, in particular singling out the importance of China as a major trading partner while indicating reluctance to take a firm stance on security tensions in the Taiwan Strait.

Still, Mr. Lee has pledged to continue Mr. Yoon’s engagement with Japan and said the alliance with the United States is the backbone of South Korea’s global diplomacy. — Reuters

Global alarm rises as China’s critical mineral export curbs take hold

A mining machine is seen at the Bayan Obo mine containing rare earth minerals, in Inner Mongolia, China July 16, 2011. — REUTERS

ALARM over China’s stranglehold on critical minerals grew on Tuesday as global automakers joined their US counterparts to complain that restrictions by China on exports of rare earth alloys, mixtures and magnets could cause production delays and outages without a quick solution.

German automakers became the latest to warn that China’s export restrictions threaten to shut down production and rattle their local economies, following a similar complaint from an Indian electric vehicle maker last week.

China’s decision in April to suspend exports of a wide range of rare earths and related magnets has upended the supply chains central to automakers, aerospace manufacturers, semiconductor companies and military contractors around the world.

The move underscores China’s dominance of the critical mineral industry and is seen as leverage by China in its ongoing trade war with US President Donald J. Trump.

Mr. Trump has sought to redefine the trading relationship with the US’ top economic rival China by imposing steep tariffs on billions of dollars of imported goods in hopes of narrowing a wide trade deficit and bringing back lost manufacturing.

Mr. Trump imposed tariffs as high as 145% against China only to scale them back after stock, bond and currency markets revolted over the sweeping nature of the levies. China has responded with its own tariffs and is leveraging its dominance in key supply chains to persuade Mr. Trump to back down.

Mr. Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are expected to talk this week, White House Spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Tuesday, and the export curbs are expected to be high on the agenda.

“I can assure you that the administration is actively monitoring China’s compliance with the Geneva trade agreement,” she said. “Our administration officials continue to be engaged in correspondence with their Chinese counterparts.”

Mr. Trump has previously signaled that China’s slow pace of easing the critical mineral export controls represents a violation of the agreement reached last month in Geneva.

MAGNETS HELD UP AT CHINESE PORTS
Shipments of the magnets, essential for assembling everything from cars and drones to robots and missiles, have been halted at many Chinese ports while license applications make their way through the Chinese regulatory system.

The restrictions have triggered anxiety in corporate boardrooms and nations’ capitals -— from Tokyo to Washington — as officials scrambled to identify limited alternative options amid fears that production of new automobiles and other items could grind to a halt by summer’s end.

“If the situation is not changed quickly, production delays and even production outages can no longer be ruled out,” Hildegard Mueller, head of Germany’s auto lobby, told Reuters on Tuesday.

Chinese state media reported last week that China was considering relaxing the curbs for European semiconductor firms while the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has said it would strengthen cooperation with other countries over its controls.

However, rare-earth magnet exports from China halved in April as exporters grappled with the opaque licensing scheme.

Frank Fannon, a minerals industry consultant and former US assistant secretary of state for energy resources during Mr. Trump’s first term, said the global disruptions are not shocking to those paying attention.

“I don’t think anyone should be surprised how this is playing out. We have a production challenge (in the US) and we need to leverage our whole of government approach to secure resources and ramp up domestic capability as soon as possible. The time horizon to do this was yesterday,” Mr. Fannon said.

Diplomats, automakers and other executives from India, Japan and Europe were urgently seeking meetings with Beijing officials to push for faster approval of rare earth magnet exports, sources told Reuters, as shortages threatened to halt global supply chains.

A business delegation from Japan will visit Beijing in early June to meet the Ministry of Commerce over the curbs, and European diplomats from countries with big auto industries have also sought “emergency” meetings with Chinese officials in recent weeks, Reuters reported.

India, where Bajaj Auto warned that any further delays in securing the supply of rare earth magnets from China could “seriously impact” electric vehicle production, is organizing a trip for auto executives in the next two to three weeks.

In May, the head of the trade group representing General Motors, Toyota, Volkswagen and other major automakers raised similar concerns in a letter to the Trump administration.

“Without reliable access to these elements and magnets, automotive suppliers will be unable to produce critical automotive components, including automatic transmissions, throttle bodies, alternators, various motors, sensors, seat belts, speakers, lights, motors, power steering, and cameras,” the Alliance for Automotive Innovation wrote in the letter. — Reuters

Expanding missile threats and airspace closures are straining airlines

United Airlines planes are parked at their gates at O’Hare International Airport ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday in Chicago, Illinois, US, Nov. 20, 2021. — REUTERS

NEW DELHI — Proliferating conflict zones are an increasing burden on airline operations and profitability, executives say, as carriers grapple with missiles and drones, airspace closures, location spoofing and the shoot-down of another passenger flight.

Airlines are racking up costs and losing market share from cancelled flights and expensive re-routings, often at short notice. The aviation industry, which prides itself on its safety performance, is investing more in data and security planning.

“Flight planning in this kind of environment is extremely difficult… The airline industry thrives on predictability, and the absence of this will always drive greater cost,” said Guy Murray, who leads aviation security at European carrier TUI Airline.

With increasing airspace closures around Russia and Ukraine, throughout the Middle East, between India and Pakistan and in parts of Africa, airlines are left with fewer route options.

“Compared to five years ago, more than half of the countries being overflown on a typical Europe-Asia flight would now need to be carefully reviewed before each flight,” said Mark Zee, founder of OPSGROUP, a membership-based organization that shares flight risk information.

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict in the Middle East since October 2023 led to commercial aviation sharing the skies with short-notice barrages of drones and missiles across major flight paths — some of which were reportedly close enough to be seen by pilots and passengers.

Russian airports, including in Moscow, are now regularly shut down for brief periods due to drone activity, while interference with navigation systems, known as global positioning  system spoofing or jamming, is surging around political fault lines worldwide.

When hostilities broke out between India and Pakistan last month, the neighbors blocked each other’s aircraft from their respective airspace.

“Airspace should not be used as a retaliatory tool, but it is,” Nick Careen, International Air Transport Association (IATA) senior vice-president for operations, safety and security, told reporters at the airline body’s annual meeting in New Delhi on Tuesday.

Isidre Porqueras, chief operating officer at Indian carrier IndiGo said the recent diversions were undoing efforts to reduce emissions and increase airline efficiencies.

WORST-CASE SCENARIO
Finances aside, civil aviation’s worst-case scenario is a plane being hit, accidentally or intentionally, by weaponry.

In December, an Azerbaijan Airlines flight crashed in Kazakhstan, killing 38 people. The plane was accidentally shot down by Russian air defenses, according to Azerbaijan’s president and Reuters sources.

In October, a cargo plane was shot down in Sudan, killing five people.

Six commercial aircraft have been shot down, with three near-misses since 2001, according to aviation risk consultancy Osprey Flight Solutions.

Governments need to share information more effectively to keep civil aviation secure as conflict zones proliferate, IATA Director General Willie Walsh said this week.

Safety statistics used by the commercial aviation industry show a steady decline in accidents over the past two decades, but these do not include security-related incidents such as being hit by weaponry.

IATA said in February that accidents and incidents related to conflict zones were a top concern for aviation safety requiring urgent global coordination.

TOUGH CHOICES
Each airline decides where to travel based on a patchwork of government notices, security advisers, and information-sharing between carriers and states, leading to divergent policies.

The closure of Russian airspace to most Western carriers since the outbreak of war in Ukraine in 2022 put them at a cost disadvantage compared to airlines from places like China, India and the Middle East that continue to take shorter northern routes that need less fuel and fewer crew.

Shifting risk calculations mean Singapore Airlines’ flight SQ326 from Singapore to Amsterdam has used three different routes into Europe in just over a year, Flightradar24 tracking data shows.

When reciprocal missile and drone attacks broke out between Iran and Israel in April 2024, it started crossing previously avoided Afghanistan instead of Iran.

Last month, its route shifted again to avoid Pakistan’s airspace as conflict escalated between India and Pakistan. Flight SQ326 now reaches Europe via the Persian Gulf and Iraq. Singapore Airlines did not respond immediately to a request for comment.

Pilots and flight attendants are also worried about how the patchwork of shifting risk might impact their safety.

“IATA says airlines should decide if it’s safe to fly over conflict zones, not regulators. But history shows commercial pressures can cloud those decisions,” said Paul Reuter, vice-president of the European Cockpit Association, which represents pilots.

Flight crew typically have the right to refuse a trip due to concerns about airspace, whether over weather or conflict zones, IATA Security Head Careen said.

“Most airlines, in fact, I would say the vast majority of them, do not want crew on an aircraft if they don’t feel comfortable flying,” he said. — Reuters

Scientists in Japan develop plastic that dissolves in seawater within hours

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Naja Bertolt Jensen from Unsplash

WAKO, Japan — Researchers in Japan have developed a plastic that dissolves in seawater within hours, offering up a potential solution for a modern-day scourge polluting oceans and harming wildlife.

While scientists have long experimented with biodegradable plastics, researchers from the RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science and the University of Tokyo say their new material breaks down much more quickly and leaves no residual trace.

At a lab in Wako city near Tokyo, the team demonstrated a small piece of plastic vanishing in a container of salt water after it was stirred up for about an hour.

While the team has not yet detailed any plans for commercialization, project lead Takuzo Aida said their research has attracted significant interest, including from those in the packaging sector.

Scientists worldwide are racing to develop innovative solutions to the growing plastic waste crisis, an effort championed by awareness campaigns such as World Environment Day taking place on June 5.

Plastic pollution is set to triple by 2040, the United Nations Environment Programme has predicted, adding 23-37 million metric tons of waste into the world’s oceans each year.

“Children cannot choose the planet they will live on. It is our duty as scientists to ensure that we leave them with best possible environment,” Mr. Aida said.

Mr. Aida said the new material is as strong as petroleum-based plastics but breaks down into its original components when exposed to salt. Those components can then be further processed by naturally occurring bacteria, thereby avoiding generating microplastics that can harm aquatic life and enter the food chain.

As salt is also present in soil, a piece about five centimeters (two inches) in size disintegrates on land after over 200 hours, he added.

The material can be used like regular plastic when coated, and the team is focusing their current research on the best coating methods, Mr. Aida said. The plastic is non-toxic, non-flammable, and does not emit carbon dioxide, he added. — Reuters

Madrid’s ‘ghost towns’ revived as Spain’s housing crisis escalates

A view shows the Chamartin Train Station rail tracks around and over which the Spanish capital’s ‘Madrid Nuevo Norte’ new business district is set to be built, in Madrid, Spain, Oct. 24, 2023. — REUTERS

SESENA, Spain — The first call came two minutes after estate agent Segis Gomez posted a listing in Sesena, a development near Madrid that gained notoriety as one of the so-called “ghost towns” created when Spain’s property bubble burst in 2008.

Half-built and half-empty for more than a decade, these days the squatters have gone from this development 40 kilometers  (km) (24.85 miles) south of the capital and middle-class families, driven out of the city center by an acute housing crisis, are moving in. Construction, meanwhile, has restarted.

Demand is so strong in Sesena that Gomez has a waiting list of 70 people for each property. Property prices have recovered their original value after plunging to less than half during the crisis, he said.

As anger grows over the cost of housing in Spain, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has made providing affordable homes one of his main goals — even as he encourages population growth through immigration. The size of the challenge is clear in Madrid, which grew by 140,000 people in 2024, but only registered permits to build 20,000 new homes.

Short supply is being exacerbated by a boom in holiday lets, record migration and onerous planning laws.

“The problem is that we can’t match supply and demand quickly enough. So prices go up, or people have to trade price for distance,” said Carles Vergara, a real estate professor at IESE Business School in Madrid.

Sesena has been adopted as a commuter town as Madrid overflows, even though it is located in the neighboring Castile-La Mancha region and still lacks good transport links to the capital and public services, which caused homebuyers to reject it in the past.

Its founder and original developer, Francisco Hernando, had a vision of 13,000 affordable apartments with gardens and swimming pools on the Spanish plain where author Cervantes set his best-known work Don Quixote, but the project became a byword for speculative greed and corruption. Only 5,000 homes ended up being built.

Hernando, who began his project in 2004, failed to tell homebuyers he hadn’t secured access to water or that the town had no public transport or schools. Hernando died in 2020.

When the market collapsed, initial investors saw the value of their property plummet, while many homes ended up in the hands of banks.

MADRID’S EXPANSION
Today, Sesena teems with life as parents drop children at its three schools, drink coffee in its bars and visit recently opened gyms and pharmacies.

Impact Homes, a developer, is constructing 156 one-to-four-bedroom apartments it expects to complete this year. Next door, another building has already pre-sold 49% of its units, it said in an e-mail.

“Sesena is at 100%,” said Jaime de Hita, the town’s mayor.

Nestor Delgado moved to Sesena in 2021 with his family from Carabanchel in south Madrid because an apartment cost 20% less to rent. In May, he bought a house with his wife for €240,000 ($272,808).

“We chose (Sesena) because we can afford it,” Delgado, 34, said.

The trade-off is rising before 5 a.m. (0300 GMT) to be among the first in the queue for the 6.30 a.m. bus to Madrid to arrive at his construction job by 8 a.m. or face an hour’s wait for the next bus.

BACK TO LIFE
Other ghost towns are also coming back to life. Valdeluz, a development 75km east of Madrid originally envisioned to house 30,000 people, was abandoned a quarter of the way through when the property bubble burst.

Mayor Enrique Quintana told Reuters the town’s 6,000-strong population is swelling with people from Madrid and could expand by 50% in the next four years.

A development on the edge of the village of Bernuy de Porreros, 100km north of Madrid, which as recently as six years ago was mostly abandoned, is now bustling with activity as handymen put the finishing touches on homes.

Lucia, a 37-year-old state employee, bought her house in April. Her daily commute to Madrid involves a 15-minute drive to the train station in Segovia and 28 minutes on the high-speed train, which costs her €48 for 30 trips thanks to a frequent traveller discount.

The development began to revive when Spain’s so-called bad bank Sareb, which was set up to take bad loans from the financial crisis, in 2021 began selling the homes for as little as €97,000. Four years later, one property was resold for double that, said resident Nuria Alvarez.

Until recently a relatively compact city, Madrid is on the way to becoming a metropolis like Paris or London, with commuter zones stretching beyond its administrative boundaries, said Jose Maria Garcia, the regional government’s deputy housing minister.

The metropolitan area’s population of 7 million will grow by a million in the next 15 years, the government estimates.

Madrid has a deficit of 80,000-100,000 homes that’s growing by 15,000 homes a year and plans to build 110,000 homes by 2028, Garcia said.

Sesena, meanwhile, is once again dreaming big.

Its mayor, De Hita, said the town is securing permits for a new project dubbed Parquijote, with a proposed investment of €2.3 billion to build a logistics park that will create local jobs, along with 2,200 homes.

It’s no quixotic fantasy, De Hita said.

“This time we have learned from what happened,” he said. “It is fundamental that we look for growth by learning from the past.” — Reuters

Firms urged to upskill workers amid potential AI-driven job losses

FREEPIK

Companies should upskill their employees for higher-value tasks to stay competitive and mitigate the risk of job losses driven by artificial intelligence (AI), according to a top official from U.S.-based software company Salesforce. 

“I think there are opportunities for customers and companies to reimagine where they use humans and where they use autonomous agents, and to move humans into higher-value tasks,” Gavin Barfield, Vice President and Chief Technology Officer for Solutions at Salesforce, said during his presentation. 

Mr. Barfield said that AI should augment human workers, not replace them.  

For instance, in customer service, Mr. Barfield said that human employees can be trained to focus on higher-value tasks that require greater levels of trust, security, or empathy. 

Meanwhile, agentic AI platforms like Salesforce’s Agentforce can autonomously handle basic and repetitive customer service processes.  

By augmenting humans with AI, Mr. Barfield said, companies can improve productivity and enhance customer satisfaction since wait times will be shorter. 

A 2025 LinkedIn report projects that by 2030, 70% of job skills will change due to the impact of artificial intelligence.  

It also reported a rise in employees adding AI skills to their LinkedIn profiles, with growth ranging from 12 times in Germany to over 80 times in the United Arab Emirates since 2016.  

Of the companies that have adopted AI, such as generative AI, the report also said  51% have seen a revenue increase of 10% or more. 

For human employees, Mr. Barfield said it is high time to adapt to AI, emphasizing that AI is not their competition—rather, it is for those who know how to use AI.  

“Because it will be the people who can use AI effectively who get to boost their productivity and get things done that will excel. Those who don’t use AI, who still try to do things manually and aren’t able to use the technology, may struggle,” he said. 

Online job platform JobStreet’s 2024 report said that 46% of Filipinos are already using AI for work—above the global average of 39%. 

Also, the Philippines could see up to P2.8 trillion in economic benefits from artificial intelligence (AI) by 2030, according to global tech advisory firm Access Partnership.Edg Adrian A. Eva

Globe Platinum Gastronome Giving returns to feed both palate and purpose in support of Hapag Movement

In a world where every meal is a moment, Globe Platinum invites you to savor something more meaningful. Gastronome Giving, the much-anticipated signature dining series, is back, this time with even more heart.

From June 1 to Aug. 31, 2025, the elevated culinary experience transforms intimate dinners into opportunities for impact. A partnership between Globe Platinum and the Fine Dining Club Philippines, Gastronome Giving brings together some of the country’s most celebrated chefs and destination restaurants in support of a singular mission: fighting involuntary hunger through the Hapag Movement.

Here, indulgence meets intention. Each seat at the table helps bring meals and sustainable livelihood to Filipino families in need. “Gastronome Giving is purpose on a plate,” says Yoly Crisanto, Globe’s Chief Sustainability and Corporate Communications Officer. “It’s a beautiful reminder that what nourishes us is also an opportunity to nourish others.”

For Globe Platinum, it’s about deepening the meaning of luxury. “Our customers value experiences that are not only rare and refined, but also resonate with their values,” shares Mark Pasaylo, Head of Globe Platinum. “With Gastronome Giving, we’re giving them a chance to enjoy exquisite cuisine while directly supporting families through the Hapag Movement. It’s fine dining with soul.”

On the menu are curated tasting journeys from a diverse selection of culinary gems. Whether it’s fire-kissed Basque-Filipino fare at Goxo in Makati, soulful island cooking at Kasa Palma, or the quiet luxury of precision plates at Taupe in BGC, every venue offers a deeply personal experience. And with other stops including Anzani in Cebu, Mrs. Saldo’s in Silang (Cavite), and Roots in Siargao, the series captures the rich diversity of Filipino dining — each bite a celebration of place, passion, and purpose. For added ease, Globe Platinum customers may book through THEA, their 24/7 digital assistant, available anytime.

First launched in 2023, Gastronome Giving returns this year in full support of the Hapag Movement, Globe’s flagship initiative to combat involuntary hunger in the Philippines. Through Gastronome Giving, every course served contributes to these life-changing programs, turning indulgent meals into acts of generosity.

  


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AI startups revolutionize coding industry, leading to sky-high valuations

FREEPIK

 – Two years after the launch of ChatGPT, return on investment in generative AI has been elusive, but one area stands out: software development.

So-called code generation or “code-gen” startups are commanding sky-high valuations as corporate boardrooms look to use AI to aid, and sometimes to replace, expensive human software engineers.

Cursor, a code generation startup based in San Francisco that can suggest and complete lines of code and write whole sections of code autonomously, raised $900 million at a $10 billion valuation in May from a who’s who list of tech investors, including Thrive Capital, Andreessen Horowitz and Accel.

Windsurf, a Mountain View-based startup behind the popular AI coding tool Codeium, attracted the attention of ChatGPT maker OpenAI, which is now in talks to acquire the company for $3 billion, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.

Its tool is known for translating plain English commands into code, sometimes called “vibe coding,” which allows people with no knowledge of computer languages to write software. OpenAI and Windsurf declined to comment on the acquisition.

“AI has automated all the repetitive, tedious work,” said Scott Wu, CEO of code gen startup Cognition. “The software engineer’s role has already changed dramatically. It’s not about memorizing esoteric syntax anymore.”

Founders of code-gen startups and their investors believe they are in a land grab situation, with a shrinking window to gain a critical mass of users and establish their AI coding tool as the industry standard.

But because most are built on AI foundation models developed elsewhere, such as OpenAI, Anthropic, or DeepSeek, their costs per query are also growing, and none are yet profitable.

They’re also at risk of being disrupted by Google, Microsoft and OpenAI, which all announced new code-gen products in May, and Anthropic is also working on one as well, two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.

The rapid growth of these startups is coming despite competing on big tech’s home turf. Microsoft’s GitHub Copilot, launched in 2021 and considered code-gen’s dominant player, grew to over $500 million in revenue last year, according to a source familiar with the matter.

Microsoft declined to comment on GitHub Copilot’s revenue. On Microsoft’s earnings call in April, the company said the product has over 15 million users.

 

LEARN TO CODE?

As AI revolutionizes the industry, many jobs – particularly entry-level coding positions that are more basic and involve repetition – may be eliminated.

Signalfire, a VC firm that tracks tech hiring, found that new hires with less than a year of experience fell 24% in 2024, a drop it attributes to tasks once assigned to entry-level software engineers are now being fulfilled in part with AI.

Google’s CEO also said in April that “well over 30%” of Google’s code is now AI-generated, and Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said last year the company had saved “the equivalent of 4,500 developer-years” by using AI.

In May, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said at a conference that approximately 20 to 30% of their code is now AI-generated. The same month, the company announced layoffs of 6,000 workers globally, with over 40% of those being software developers in Microsoft’s home state, Washington.

“We’re focused on creating AI that empowers developers to be more productive, creative, and save time,” a Microsoft spokesperson said. “This means some roles will change with the revolution of AI, but human intelligence remains at the center of the software development life cycle.”

 

MOUNTING LOSSES

Some “vibe-coding” platforms already boast substantial annualized revenues.

Cursor, with just 60 employees, went from zero to $100 million in recurring revenue by January 2025, less than two years since its launch. Windsurf, founded in 2021, launched its code generation product in November 2024 and is already bringing in $50 million in annualized revenue, according to a source familiar with the company.

But both startups operate with negative gross margins, meaning they spend more than they make, according to four investor sources familiar with their operations.

“The prices people are paying for coding assistants are going to get more expensive,” Quinn Slack, CEO at coding startup Sourcegraph, told Reuters.

Both Cursor and Windsurf are led by recent MIT graduates in their twenties, and exemplify the gold rush era of the AI startup scene. “I haven’t seen people working this hard since the first Internet boom,” said Martin Casado, a general partner at Andreessen Horowitz, an investor in Anysphere, the company behind Cursor.

What’s less clear is whether the dozen or so code-gen companies will be able to hang on to their customers as big tech moves in.

“In many cases, it’s less about who’s got the best technology — it’s about who is going to make the best use of that technology, and who’s going to be able to sell their products better than others,” said Scott Raney, managing director at Redpoint Ventures, whose firm invested in Sourcegraph and Poolside, a software development startup that’s building its own AI foundation model.

 

CUSTOM AI MODELS

Most of the AI coding startups currently rely on the Claude AI model from Anthropic, which crossed $3 billion in annualized revenue in May in part due to fees paid by code-gen companies.

But some startups are attempting to build their own models. In May, Windsurf announced its first in-house AI models that are optimized for software engineering in a bid to control the user experience. Cursor has also hired a team of researchers to pre-train its own large frontier-level models, which could enable the company to not have to pay foundation model companies so much money, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

Startups looking to train their own AI coding models face an uphill battle as it could easily cost millions to buy or rent the computing capacity needed to train a large language model.

Replit earlier dropped plans to train its own model. Poolside, which has raised more than $600 million to make a coding-specific model, has announced a partnership with Amazon Web Services and is testing with customers, but hasn’t made any product generally available yet.

Another code gen startup Magic Dev, which raised nearly $500 million since 2023, told investors a frontier-level coding model was coming in summer 2024 but hasn’t yet launched a product.

Poolside declined to comment. Magic Dev did not respond to a request for comment. – Reuters

Global alarms rise as China’s critical mineral export curbs take hold

PAT WHELEN-UNSPLASH

Alarm over China’s stranglehold on critical minerals grew on Tuesday as global automakers joined their U.S. counterparts to complain that restrictions by China on exports of rare earth alloys, mixtures and magnets could cause production delays and outages without a quick solution.

German automakers became the latest to warn that China’s export restrictions threaten to shut down production and rattle their local economies, following a similar complaint from an Indian EV maker last week.

China’s decision in April to suspend exports of a wide range of critical minerals and magnets has upended the supply chains central to automakers, aerospace manufacturers, semiconductor companies and military contractors around the world.

The move underscores China’s dominance of the critical mineral industry and is seen as leverage by China in its ongoing trade war with U.S. President Donald Trump.

Mr. Trump has sought to redefine the trading relationship with the U.S.’ top economic rival China by imposing steep tariffs on billions of dollars of imported goods in hopes of narrowing a wide trade deficit and bringing back lost manufacturing.

Mr. Trump imposed tariffs as high as 145% against China only to scale them back after stock, bond and currency markets revolted over the sweeping nature of the levies. China has responded with its own tariffs and is leveraging its dominance in key supply chains to persuade Mr. Trump to back down.

Mr. Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are expected to talk this week, White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Tuesday, and the export ban is expected to be high on the agenda.

“I can assure you that the administration is actively monitoring China’s compliance with the Geneva trade agreement,” she said. “Our administration officials continue to be engaged in correspondence with their Chinese counterparts.”

Mr. Trump has previously signaled that China’s slow pace of easing the critical mineral export ban represents a violation of the Geneva agreement.

Shipments of the magnets, essential for assembling everything from cars and drones to robots and missiles, have been halted at many Chinese ports while license applications make their way through the Chinese regulatory system.

The suspension has triggered anxiety in corporate boardrooms and nations’ capitals – from Tokyo to Washington – as officials scrambled to identify limited alternative options amid fears that production of new automobiles and other items could grind to a halt by summer’s end.

“If the situation is not changed quickly, production delays and even production outages can no longer be ruled out,” Hildegard Mueller, head of Germany’s auto lobby, told Reuters on Tuesday.

Frank Fannon, a minerals industry consultant and former U.S. assistant secretary of state for energy resources during Trump’s first term, said the global disruptions are not shocking to those paying attention.

“I don’t think anyone should be surprised how this is playing out. We have a production challenge (in the U.S.) and we need to leverage our whole of government approach to secure resources and ramp up domestic capability as soon as possible. The time horizon to do this was yesterday,” Mr. Fannon.

Diplomats, automakers and other executives from India, Japan and Europe were urgently seeking meetings with Beijing officials to push for faster approval of rare earth magnet exports, sources told Reuters, as shortages threatened to halt global supply chains.

A business delegation from Japan will visit Beijing in early June to meet the Ministry of Commerce over the curbs and European diplomats from countries with big auto industries have also sought “emergency” meetings with Chinese officials in recent weeks, Reuters reported.

India, where Bajaj Auto warned that any further delays in securing the supply of rare earth magnets from China could “seriously impact” electric vehicle production, is organizing a trip for auto executives in the next two to three weeks.

In May, the head of the trade group representing General Motors, Toyota, Volkswagen, Hyundai and other major automakers raised similar concerns in a letter to the Trump administration.

“Without reliable access to these elements and magnets, automotive suppliers will be unable to produce critical automotive components, including automatic transmissions, throttle bodies, alternators, various motors, sensors, seat belts, speakers, lights, motors, power steering, and cameras,” the Alliance for Automotive Innovation wrote in the letter. – Reuters

Musk calls Trump’s tax-cut and spending bill ‘a disgusting abomination’

ELON MUSK — REUTERS

 – Billionaire Elon Musk plunged on Tuesday into the congressional debate over President Donald Trump‘s sweeping tax and spending bill, calling it a “disgusting abomination” that will increase the federal deficit.

Several fiscally conservative Republicans in the U.S. Senate supported the views Musk expressed in social media posts, which could complicate the bill’s path to passage in that chamber.

“I’m sorry, but I just can’t stand it anymore,” Tesla and SpaceX CEO Musk wrote in a post on his social media platform X. “This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination.”

He added: “Shame on those who voted for it: you know you did wrong. You know it.”

Mr. Musk’s comments hit a nerve. Republican deficit hawks have expressed concerns about the cost of the bill, which would extend the 2017 tax cuts that were Mr. Trump’s main legislative accomplishment, while boosting spending on the military and border security.

The House of Representatives passed it by one vote last month, after the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said the measure would add $3.8 trillion to the federal government’s $36.2 trillion in debt.

The Senate, also controlled by Mr. Trump’s Republicans, aims to pass the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” in the next month, though senators are expected to revise the House version.

Republicans on the Senate Finance Committee, which oversees tax policy, are due to meet with Trump at the White House on Wednesday afternoon to discuss making the bill’s business-related tax breaks permanent, according to Senator Steve Daines, a panel member. Analysts have warned that such a move would greatly increase the measure’s cost.

Republican Senate Majority Leader John Thune said he disagreed with Musk’s assessment about the cost of the bill and stood by the goal of passage by July 4.

“We have a job to do – the American people elected us to do. We have an agenda that everybody campaigned on, most notably the president of the United States, and we’re going to deliver on that agenda,” the South Dakota lawmaker told reporters.

Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson also dismissed Mr. Musk’s complaints, telling reporters, “my friend Elon is terribly wrong.”

 

TEST OF INFLUENCE

Mr. Musk’s loud opposition to a bill that Mr. Trump has urged Republicans to pass presents a test of his political influence a week after leaving his formal role in the administration as a special government employee with the Department of Government Efficiency came to an end. As DOGE chief, he upended several federal agencies but ultimately failed to deliver the massive savings he had sought.

The richest person in the world, Musk had spent nearly $300 million to back Trump’s presidential campaign and other Republicans in last year’s elections. But he has said he would cut his political spending substantially while returning to his role as Tesla CEO.

The White House dismissed Tuesday’s attack, just as Mr. Trump dismissed earlier Mr. Musk complaints about the legislation.

“Look, the president already knows where Elon Musk stood on this bill,” spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said at a White House briefing. “It doesn’t change the president’s opinion. This is one big, beautiful bill, and he’s sticking to it.”

 

REPUBLICAN DISAGREEMENTS

Senate Republicans were divided about the bill even before Musk’s missives. Deficit hawks are pushing for deeper spending cuts than the $1.6 trillion over a decade in the House version, while another coalition of rural-state Republicans are pushing to protect the Medicaid healthcare program for low-income Americans.

One of the hawks, Senator Mike Lee, called on party members to use the Trump bill and future spending measures to reduce the deficit.

“We must commit now to doing so, as this is what voters justifiably expect – and indeed deserve – from the GOP Congress,” the Utah Republican said on X while reposting Mr. Musk’s message.

Republicans have a 53-47 seat majority in the Senate and can afford to lose support from no more than three members, if they expect to pass the legislation with a tie-breaking vote from Vice President JD Vance by a July 4 deadline.

Another hardliner, Senator Ron Johnson, predicted that lawmakers would not be able to meet the deadline and secure an adequate number of cuts.

Mr. Lee and Mr. Johnson are among at least four Senate hardliners demanding that the bill be changed to restrict the growth of the debt and deficit.

The faction of party lawmakers determined to limit spending cuts to project Medicaid beneficiaries and business investments in green energy initiatives is of similar size.

“I certainly have an interest in making sure people with disabilities are not harmed. But also, there’s the broad issue of how does it affect hospital reimbursements,” Senator Jerry Moran told reporters.

“There’s a set of my colleagues who are pushing to do more. And so it turns on how do you get the votes to pass a bill,” the Kansas Republican said.

Other Senate Republicans said lawmakers may have to look elsewhere to boost savings, including the possibility of leaving Trump’s much touted tax break proposals for tips, overtime pay and Social Security benefits for later legislation.

“Those are all Democrat priorities. I’m not sure why we shouldn’t be doing that in a potential bipartisan bill to create headspace for this bill,” said Republican Senator Thom Tillis. – Reuters

Japan’s ruling coalition partner to propose sales tax cut on food, Yomiuri reports

A VENDOR prepares food for sale inside a stall at Tsukiji Outer Market in Tokyo, Japan, Aug. 12, 2024. — REUTERS

 – Japan’s junior ruling coalition partner, Komeito, will propose cutting the consumption tax rate for food items to 5% from 8% in a campaign pledge for the upper house election slated in July, the Yomiuri newspaper reported on Wednesday.

The campaign pledge, to be announced on Friday, will also include a proposal to offer cash payouts to cushion the blow to households from rising living costs, the paper said.

The proposed stimulus plan will be funded by an expected increase in tax revenues instead of additional debt issuance, according to the draft obtained by Yomiuri.

Japan applies an 8% consumption tax rate for food and 10% for other items, with the proceeds mostly used to fund social welfare costs for a rapidly ageing economy.

A proposal to cut the tax rate from Komeito, which is a junior coalition partner of the Liberal Democratic Party, would add pressure on Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba to offer more fiscal support to voters ahead of the upper house poll.

Mr. Ishiba and senior LDP officials so far have pushed back against calls from opposition parties to cut the consumption tax rate, arguing that doing so would worsen Japan’s already tattered finances.

Concern over Japan’s huge public debt, which will become more expensive to finance as the Bank of Japan eyes further interest rate hikes, has been among factors that led to a surge in super-long government bond yields last month. – Reuters

US skips hike in UK steel and aluminum tariffs as both countries eye quick trade deal

 – The United States on Tuesday announced it would skip doubling steel and aluminum tariffs for Britain, hours after the UK government said the two countries agreed on the need to implement a tariff relief deal as soon as possible.

The U.S. announcement, which exempts British steel and aluminum from a doubling of tariffs to 50%, came in a proclamation signed by U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday that will raise metals tariffs for other countries from June 4.

British trade minister Jonathan Reynolds and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer met in Paris on Tuesday during a meeting of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

“The UK was the first country to secure a trade deal with the U.S. earlier this month and we remain committed to protecting British business and jobs across key sectors,” a UK government spokesperson said.

“We’re pleased that as a result of our agreement with the U.S., UK steel will not be subject to these additional tariffs. We will continue to work with the U.S. to implement our agreement, which will see the 25% U.S. tariffs on steel removed.”

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Mr. Trump on May 8 agreed to reduce tariffs on UK imports of cars and steel to the U.S., with Britain agreeing to lower tariffs on beef and ethanol, but implementation of the deal has been delayed.

Industry body UK Steel had earlier warned that doubled tariffs would be a “body blow” to the British steel sector.

Britain’s trade ministry said Mr. Greer and Mr. Reynolds met to discuss the pace of implementation of the May 8 bilateral trade deal, and both sides agreed that businesses and consumers in each country needed to start feeling its benefits.

“The pair discussed their shared desire to implement the Economic Prosperity Deal, including implementing agreements on sectoral tariffs as soon as possible,” Britain’s trade ministry said in a statement after the meeting.

Mr. Greer’s office had no immediate comment on the meeting.

Before the meeting, Mr. Starmer’s spokesperson said, once implemented, the deal with Washington would eliminate tariffs on the “majority of steel products” exported to the United States, and that “we’d continue to expect that to be the case” regardless of the 50% tariff announced by Mr. Trump.

He also said that industry minister Sarah Jones was meeting with representatives from the steel sector on Tuesday.

Asked earlier if the 50% tariffs would go ahead on Wednesday, Greer, speaking French with reporters in Paris, said: “We’ll see.”

Reynolds is on a three-day trip to Paris and Brussels. After meetings with Group of Seven and OECD counterparts in Paris, he will hold talks with EU trade commissioner Maros Sefcovic.

Britain struck deals with the U.S. and the European Union – its two biggest trading partners – last month, but both are political pacts rather than formal trade agreements, and the details of their implementation have not been set.

With the EU deal, plans to remove red tape on the food sector are yet to be finalized. In advance of that agreement coming into force, Britain on Monday said it would scrap border checks on fruit and vegetables imported from the EU that had been due to be effective beginning in July. – Reuters