ACQUISITIONS
Google seals $32 billion deal for cyber startup Wiz
Google has agreed to buy Wiz, a fast-growing cybersecurity startup, for $32 billion in the company’s biggest push to strengthen its cloud-computing business and expand beyond the search engine and consumer internet services that made it a household name. The all-cash deal, announced Tuesday, would be Google’s largest, easily surpassing its $12.5 billion purchase of Motorola Mobility in 2012. With the deal, Google would get a five-year-old company that most consumers are unfamiliar with but that a growing number of businesses rely on to protect their cloud applications. The Silicon Valley giant worked for months last year to forge a deal for Wiz, which was most recently valued at $12 billion. In July, Wiz rejected Google’s $23 billion takeover offer, saying it wanted to pursue an initial public offering, but an IPO never came. The splashy purchase, which the companies expect to close in 2026, would inject fresh momentum into Google Cloud, the division that sells computing services to other businesses. It would also be the tech giant’s most aggressive effort to keep up with Microsoft, its longtime rival, in cybersecurity. But first, Alphabet, Google’s parent company, would have to clear regulatory hurdles. The deal will test the company’s ability to conduct major acquisitions during protracted antitrust battles with the US government. — NEW YORK TIMES
AUTOMOTIVE
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China’s BYD launches EV charging system it says works nearly as fast as a fill up

China’s energy and auto giant BYD has announced an ultra fast EV charging system that it says is nearly as quick as a fill up at the pumps. BYD, China’s largest EV maker, said Monday that its flash-chargers can provide a full charge for its latest EVs within five to eight minutes, similar to the amount of time needed to fill a fuel tank. It plans to build more than 4,000 of the new charging stations across China. Charging times and limited ranges have been a major factor constraining the switch from gas and diesel vehicles to EVs, though Chinese drivers have embraced that change, with sales of battery powered and hybrid vehicles jumping 40 percent last year. — ASSOCIATED PRESS
LAYOFFS
Audi to cut 7,500 jobs in Germany to become more efficient

Volkswagen AG’s Audi will cut as many as 7,500 positions in Germany by 2029 as the automaker tries to shore up its flagging profitability. The reductions, which correspond to roughly 14 percent of the brand’s German workforce, won’t affect factory workers. Audi pledged to invest around $8.7 billion in its German locations during the period. It’s also introducing new cars to better compete in the United States and China, where its sales have slumped. “The pressure to change is at an all-time high, with competition that has dramatically changed,” the brand’s chief executive Gernot Döllner said Tuesday in Ingolstadt. Volkswagen CEO Oliver Blume is slashing spending across the group to become more competitive. The latest move brings the total number of potential job reductions at Europe’s biggest automaker to more than 40,000. Audi’s deliveries declined 12 percent last year as it struggled in markets including China. — BLOOMBERG NEWS
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GROCERY
Egg prices have dropped, though you may not have noticed

The wholesale price of eggs has dropped sharply since the beginning of March after soaring for months, but it may take a few weeks for grocery shoppers to see the decline. Wholesale egg prices, which is what retailers pay to procure eggs, have fallen to a national average of just over $4 for a dozen large white eggs, down from a peak of more than $8 at the end of February, according to data from the Agriculture Department released last week. But because eggs typically have a four-week shelf life, it might be the end of March before retail prices start to drop, said Jeremy Horpedahl, an associate professor of economics at University of Central Arkansas. Some stores, he added, may not lower prices until their current inventory sells out. Economists said that the decline in wholesale prices, which are still above long-term averages, was very likely fueled by a combination of factors: bird flu coming under control, weaker consumer demand, ramped-up supply, and producer pricing decisions. The Agriculture Department noted that there had been no significant outbreaks of avian flu in March so far, and economists say any new outbreaks could push up prices again. The virus has forced egg producers to cull tens of millions of hens since late last year. In February, the retail price of eggs rose 10.4 percent from the previous month, continuing a months-long climb, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics released last week. — NEW YORK TIMES
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WALL STREET
Nvidia CEO loses stock kingmaker status as touts fall flat

Nvidia Corp. chief executive Jensen Huang is losing his midas touch in the stock market. A year ago, when the euphoria about artificial intelligence was in full force, Huang’s name dropping of customers and partners at the chipmaker’s GTC conference sparked a rally in a number of the stocks, including Dell Technologies Inc. and Synopsys Inc. But similar mentions in his keynote address on Tuesday were met with shrugs. Take General Motors Co. Minutes after Huang said Nvidia will help the automaker develop self-driving vehicles, GM shares sank to a session low, swept up in the tide of the broader market downdraft. It fell as much as 1.7 percent Tuesday, ending the day down 0.7 percent. The trading shows how the mood has changed as the stock market slides while President Trump’s trade war darkens the economic outlook. On top of that, tech stocks have been dragged down by growing doubts about when, if ever, the massive investments in AI spending will deliver the type of revolutionary changes that would justify the equity-price run up. — BLOOMBERG NEWS
INSURANCE
UnitedHealthcare’s new CEO reflects on tragedy, challenges in first interview

Tim Noel knows his new job as UnitedHealthcare CEO isn’t going to be much like his predecessor’s role. Noel was promoted to the position previously held by Brian Thompson, who was killed in an early morning shooting in December on his way to a UnitedHealth investor conference in Manhattan. Thompson’s death prompted a social media outcry about health insurers denying care, causing Noel to look inward about his job and industry. “I think everyone did some level of soul-searching over that period of time, I certainly did,” he said in his first media interview since taking on the new role, from the company’s headquarters outside Minneapolis. Noel, who previously helmed the company’s Medicare health plan business, said he had known Thompson for 15 years, worked for him for 10, and considered him a “good friend.” “What definitely does change is, we have to be more out there and more visible about conversations around the role that we play in the health care system and the role health insurers play.” He wants to dispel some of the misunderstandings around how insurers manage health care, saying United’s claim approval rates are 98 percent for valid claims. He also said that many of the curbs put on health care spending are actually decided by the employers who are paying for the health plan, rather than by the insurance company. Even so, the threat of violence remains. The company now has security checking cars on the way in. “We certainly have to be much more conscious of the security elements,” he said. “It’s certainly a new way that we’re operating. The answer is not to get really insular.” — BLOOMBERG NEWS
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