Trump and Musk butt headsPresident Donald Trump and Elon Musk
traded jabs on social media on Thursday as Musk continues to criticize Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” for raising the budget deficit. Trump’s attacks on Musk, which included threats to cut billions worth of government contracts to Tesla, brought the EV company’s shares
down more than 14%.
Plus:
Fortune’s Alexei Oreskovic
breaks down which Big Tech figure could replace Musk in Trump's circle.
Anduril raises $2.5 billionAnduril
announced a $2.5 billion funding round on Thursday, giving the defense firm a $30.5 billion valuation. Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund led the round with a $1 billion investment.
Making smartphones on American soilMeet Purism CEO Todd Weaver, the founder of one of the only smartphone companies that manufactures some of their smartphones in the U.S. He
says that the U.S. is disadvantaged when it comes to skilled workers and supply chain costs, but isn’t the manufacturing dead end that some believe it to be.
Judge blocks Trump's Harvard banA federal judge in Boston temporarily
blocked President Trump’s effort to ban international students from entering the U.S. to enroll at Harvard University. Around a quarter of Harvard’s students come from abroad, and the university relies on their often full-fee tuition payments.
Trump-Xi call doesn't solve mineral shortageTrump said he had a
“very good” call with China's Xi Jinping, but the high-stakes call has yet to resolve a
global shortage of rare earth minerals that businesses say could halt production of cars and other industrial goods this summer. China announced new export controls on seven rare earth elements in April.
Musk cuts ISS delivery craft—or notElon Musk said SpaceX would start to
decommission its Dragon spacecraft “immediately” because of Trump's threats to cancel government contracts with his businesses. But hours later, Musk said he nixed that decision after an X user urged him to “cool off.” Dragon is the only U.S. option for transporting crew to and from the International Space Station.
Europe's defense bonanzaEurope's rush to boost defense spending in response to Trump's threatened pullback of the U.S. from the world stage has anointed a swathe of
industrial winners beyond the obvious defense stocks, running from chemicals producers to goggle makers.
JPMorgan warns new hiresJPMorgan is telling incoming graduate employees that if they accept future-dated job offers elsewhere within 18 months of starting their analyst program, they will be fired, the
Financial Times reports. While JPMorgan did not single out private equity firms, there is an implicit reference to recruiting in which buyout groups offer graduates jobs two years ahead of their expected start date.