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9 AI Stocks That Aren't Super Volatile -- Barrons.com
As tech stocks pull back, could dividend-paying stocks driven by grid demand serve as a safe haven?
Spurred by the non-farm payroll data, market expectations for Federal Reserve rate hikes have intensified, leading to a sharp pullback in U.S. tech stocks. Against a backdrop of market structural imbalances and heightened volatility, energy and utilities sectors—benefiting from AI-driven tailwinds while offering defensive characteristics—may emerge as safe-haven destinations for capital.
Elizabeth Warren Says Private Equity Wants To Profit From AI—And Stick Consumers With The Bill
Trump’s $700 million bet on 'clean coal': Analysts say throwing money at a 'horse-drawn carriage' won’t reverse the industry’s structural decline
U.S. President Donald Trump announced that hundreds of millions of dollars in federal taxpayer funds would be used to build new coal-fired power plants, keep existing facilities operational, and construct a coal export terminal in California, in an effort to revive the U.S. coal industry.
Market rumors: Trump will allocate US$500 million to coal-fired power plants and export terminals under the Defense Production Act.
Citing White House officials, Bloomberg reported that President Donald Trump will announce the invocation of the Defense Production Act of 1950 to allocate $500 million in federal funding to support domestic coal-fired power plants and a coal export terminal. The plan reportedly includes $425 million for 13 existing coal-fired power plants and Department of Energy grants for two new plants in Alaska and West Virginia. Additionally, $75 million will be allocated to the proposed West Gateway export terminal in Oakland, California, a facility capable of shipping up to 12 million tons of coal annually. The report indicated that
Top Nuclear Energy Stocks Ranked as Uranium Shares Rally on U.S. Expansion Plans