No refunds if Supreme Court strikes down tariffs, Hassett saysIn an interview on CBS News’ Face the Nation on Sunday, National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett predicted that the justices will rule in the White House’s favor because refunding the companies that paid them would be “very complicated,” Hassett says. Lower courts have ruled that the so-called reciprocal tariffs invoked under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act are illegal, though the Supreme Court will have a final say. “And I also think that if they didn’t find with us, that it’s going to be pretty unlikely that they’re going to call for widespread refunds, because it would be an administrative problem to get those refunds out to there,”
Hassett said.
Possible successor to GM’s Barra is an old foe of MuskSterling Anderson, 42, joined GM in June as its global product chief. He previously worked at Tesla but fell out with Elon Musk and was sued by Musk after he left,
the WSJ reports. The robotics expert is a possible successor to CEO Mary Barra, 64, the paper says.
Justice Department published, deleted, and then published again some of the Epstein filesThe Justice Department
released a portion of the Epstein files on Friday and into Saturday, and some came with heavy redactions. At least 16 files then vanished from the DOJ’s Epstein document webpage a day after they were posted on Friday. Among them was file 468, an image showing a drawer filled with photographs, including one with President Trump alongside Jeffrey Epstein, Melania Trump, and Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell. Another photograph in the drawer showed Trump surrounded by women. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche told NBC’s Meet the Press on Sunday there were concerns that the photos inadvertently revealed the faces of victims, to the photos were retracted before being republished again. “It has nothing to do with President Donald Trump,”
he said.
Contempt charges drafted for BondiOn Sunday, Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) told
Face the Nation that they are
drafting “inherent contempt” charges against Attorney General Pam Bondi for every day that the entirety of the files aren’t released.
Apollo preparing for ‘when something bad happens’Apollo Global—$908 billion in assets under management—is moving into cash, cutting its leverage, and derisking from certain parts of the debt market in preparation for “when something bad happens,” according to CEO Marc Rowan. He wants the company to be prepared to invest when the market goes through any upcoming turmoil, he said in private meetings at a Goldman Sachs conference,
according to the FT.
Economists say any Fed Chair will clash with TrumpNational Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett is the favorite on prediction market Kalshi to replace Jerome Powell as Fed Chair, but economists last week
argued that any Fed chair will have trouble lowering rates as much as President Trump would like. Meanwhile, Hassett said over the weekend
that he believes the Supreme Court will find Trump’s tariffs legal, but tariff refund checks probably won’t come even if they don’t.
AI not destroying finance jobs—yetExperts told
Fortune that AI isn’t destroying finance jobs—at least, for now. Although AI in theory can perform hours of junior-level analyst tasks in just seconds, experts agree that AI-related layoffs have been insignificant so far. “If there’s a large company that might say, ‘Well, we’re not planning to hire as much because of AI,’ or maybe ‘We’re letting people go because of AI,’ I think there’s a little bit of smoke and mirrors there,” Robert Seamans, director of New York University Stern’s Center for the Future of Management, tells
Fortune.
SpaceX explosion endangered three jetsThe January 16 explosion of a SpaceX rocket over the Caribbean rained debris over a vast area of airspace for 50 minutes,
the WSJ reports, endangering three passenger jets carrying 450 people.