Business
Fed’s Bowman says she’s penciled in 3 rate cuts before the end of 2026
Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman joins ‘Mornings with Maria’ to discuss easing bank capital rules, the Fed’s outlook on economic growth, and rising risks from private credit, AI investment and global tensions.
Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman said on Friday that she’s penciled in multiple rate cuts before the end of the year.
“I’m still concerned about the job market,” Bowman, considered one of the more hawkish members of the Federal Open Market Committee, said during an interview on FOX Business Network’s “Mornings with Maria.” I want to see a little bit of recovery there. But, of course, I’ve written three cuts in for before the end of 2026 to hopefully support the labor market.”
Bowman also said she expects to continue to see strong economic growth this year.

Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman said she has written in three interest rate cuts before the end of the year. (Al Drago/Bloomberg/Getty Images)
FEDERAL RESERVE HOLDS INTEREST RATES STEADY
Her comments come after the FOMC on Wednesday voted 11-1 to leave the benchmark federal funds rate unchanged at a range of 3.5% to 3.75%. It marked the second straight meeting with rates being held steady after three successive 25-basis-point cuts in September, October and December to end last year.
Policymakers also released a summary of economic projections (SEP), which showed that the median projection for interest rates sees just one 25 basis point cut the rest of this year followed by a single cut of that size in 2027.
WILL THE FEDERAL RESERVE CUT INTEREST RATES IN 2026?
“In our SEP, FOMC participants wrote down their individual assessments of an appropriate path for the federal funds rate under what each participant judges to be the most likely scenario for the economy,” Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said. “The median participant projects that the appropriate level of the federal funds rate will be 3.4% at the end of this year and 3.1% at the end of next year, unchanged from December.”
FOX Business White House correspondent Edward Lawrence reports as the Federal Reserve announces its decision to leave rates unchanged on ‘Making Money.’
During the press conference following the Fed’s interest rate decision, Powell was asked what officials were seeing that led them to project a cut despite higher forecasts for both inflation and unchanged projections for the unemployment rate and economic growth.
FED’S POWELL SAYS IT’S ‘TOO SOON TO KNOW’ IRAN WAR’S IMPACT ON ECONOMY
“Essentially, the forecast is that we will be making some progress on inflation, not as much as we had hoped, but some progress on inflation,” Powell said. “It should come as we start to see in the middle of the year progress on tariffs going through once and then tariff inflation coming down. We should be seeing that.”

Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman, like Fed Chair Jerome Powell, said it’s too soon to tell how the Iran war will impact the U.S. economy. (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
The latest rate decision comes amid a softening labor market and growing uncertainty over the war in Iran. Similar to Powell, Bowman said it’s too soon to know how the conflict in the Middle East will affect the U.S. economy.
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“I think it’s too early to tell what the longer-term imprint will be on U.S. economic activity and how we should think about that in terms of our longer-term economic forecast and how we should think about that in terms of our FOMC meetings and any rate changes that we might make as a result of economic evolution going forward.”
Business
HHIS:CA: A Proxy Exposure To Single Stock ETFs Is On A Hold For Now(TSX:HHIS:CA)
I have been managing investments for over eight years in capital markets. By qualification I am a CFA Charter holder. I primarily look for discrepancies between the price and value of a security. With a focus on first-principal mindset, I try breaking down ideas into their core- most tangible parts, affecting the theses while deliberately avoiding the non-significant matter into crowding the analysis. If you like my ideas or frameworks, reach out via email/message for more granular and concentrated- portfolio level specific investment researches and ideas. I am at prakhar@shrihittruealphacapital.com.
Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.
Readers are advised to fact-check thoroughly before making any investment related decisions; this reflects the personal views of the author and should not be pursued as formal financial or investment advice in any manner. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, errors may exist in the data and financial projections presented. The author is not responsible for any financial gains or losses incurred from investments made based on this content. For any additional information regarding the company or any clarification, feel free to comment. Happy to discuss anything further with regard to the presented investment thesis.
Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.
Business
Which Flagship Delivers Superior AI Features in 2026?
As smartphone buyers weigh the latest flagships, the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra and Apple iPhone 17 Pro Max stand out for their advanced AI capabilities. Released in February 2026 and September 2025 respectively, both devices position artificial intelligence as a core selling point, but they take markedly different approaches.

Samsung’s third-generation Galaxy AI emphasizes proactive, contextual assistance and seamless integration across tasks, while Apple’s Apple Intelligence prioritizes on-device privacy, system-wide enhancements and gradual rollouts. Early reviews and head-to-head comparisons from outlets like Tom’s Guide, PhoneArena and YouTube creators suggest Samsung currently holds the edge in AI depth and usefulness, though Apple excels in privacy-focused execution.
The Galaxy S26 Ultra, unveiled at Galaxy Unpacked in late February 2026, runs on a customized Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset with a 39% NPU boost for always-on AI. Key features include Now Nudge, an agentic tool that analyzes screen context — such as incoming messages about plans — and surfaces suggestions like calendar checks or direct Gallery access without app switching. Now Brief delivers personalized daily summaries, while Call Screening uses AI to handle unknown calls with transcription and spam filtering.
Photo editing shines with Photo Assist, allowing natural language prompts to add, remove or modify elements in images. Creative Studio generates visuals, and enhanced Bixby integrates with Gemini and Perplexity for broader queries. Additional tools cover Live Translate for calls, Writing Assist for tone adjustments and Audio Eraser for video sound cleanup. Samsung touts these as “intuitive” and background-operated, reducing user effort while supporting multitasking without lag.
Privacy remains a focus via the world’s first built-in Privacy Display, which limits viewing angles to prevent shoulder surfing, alongside Knox Vault security and user-controlled AI toggles for on-device or cloud processing.
In contrast, the iPhone 17 Pro Max, powered by the A19 Pro chip with expanded Neural Engine capabilities and 12GB RAM on Pro models, runs Apple Intelligence on iOS 26. Features include Writing Tools for rewriting, proofreading and summarizing text across apps; Image Playground and Genmoji for custom emoji and image creation; smarter Siri with better context awareness; and Live Translation in Messages, FaceTime and Phone.

Visual intelligence lets users query on-screen content, while notification summaries and Clean Up in Photos remove distractions. Apple stresses on-device processing for privacy, with Private Cloud Compute for heavier tasks. Recent updates added Live Translation and visual enhancements, but core promises like a fully revamped Siri remain in progress, with some users reporting Gemini integration via partnerships for boosted capabilities.
Comparisons highlight Samsung’s lead in practical, everyday utility. Tom’s Guide notes the Galaxy S26 Ultra “runs circles around” the iPhone 17 Pro Max in AI, citing Now Nudge as more proactive than Apple’s offerings. YouTube breakdowns praise Galaxy AI’s photo editing superiority and agentic features, while calling Apple Intelligence “still terrible” or “behind” in assistant responsiveness. Samsung’s multimodal integration — combining Bixby, Gemini and on-device tools — provides more options, though Apple’s ecosystem lock-in delivers smoother cross-app experiences for iOS users.
Privacy and security differ sharply. Apple’s on-device-first philosophy minimizes data sharing, appealing to those wary of cloud reliance. Samsung counters with hardware like Privacy Display and granular controls, but some features lean on cloud processing for peak performance.
Battery and thermal management support sustained AI use. The Galaxy S26 Ultra’s redesigned vapor chamber handles intensive tasks without throttling, while the iPhone 17 Pro Max’s improved cooling (including vapor chamber on Max models) sustains performance during AI-heavy workloads.
User feedback varies by ecosystem. Android enthusiasts appreciate Galaxy AI’s flexibility and rapid iteration — Samsung promises seven years of updates — while iPhone loyalists value Apple’s polished, privacy-centric integration. Both platforms continue evolving; Apple plans more Apple Intelligence expansions, potentially closing the gap.
Ultimately, the Galaxy S26 Ultra edges ahead for AI feature richness and proactive assistance in 2026. Its agentic tools, superior photo AI and contextual nudges make daily tasks feel more effortless for power users. The iPhone 17 Pro Max counters with elegant, secure implementation ideal for those in the Apple ecosystem, but lags in breadth and immediacy.
As AI becomes central to smartphones, the choice hinges on priorities: Samsung’s bold, feature-packed approach or Apple’s measured, privacy-first strategy. For now, if raw AI capability drives the decision, the Galaxy S26 Ultra stands as the stronger contender.
Business
Frigidaire gas range recall affects over 174,000 units sold at major retailers
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Electrolux Group is recalling more than 174,000 Frigidaire gas ranges due to an oven-related issue that poses a burn hazard to users.
The recall affects about 169,500 units sold in the U.S. and 5,300 in Canada, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
The agency said the ovens in the ranges can experience delayed ignition of the bake burner, which poses a risk of burn hazards to users.

The recall affects about 169,500 units sold in the U.S. (Nick Oxford/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
90,000 BOTTLES OF CHILDREN’S IBUPROFEN RECALLED NATIONWIDE, FDA SAYS
The recall involves Frigidaire, Frigidaire Gallery and Frigidaire Professional gas ranges models:
- FCFG3083AS
- FCRG3083AD
- FCRG3083AS
- GCFG3060BD
- GCFG3060BF
- GCFG3070BF
- GCRG3060BD
- GCRG3060BF
- PCFG3080AF
| Ticker | Security | Last | Change | Change % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ELUXY | ELECTROLUX AB | 12.781 | -0.48 | -3.61% |
- FCFG3062AB
- FCFG3062AS
- FCFG3062AW
- FCRG3051BB
- FCRG3051BS
- FCRG3051BW
- FCRG3052BB
- FCRG3052BS
- FCRG3052BW
- FCRG3062AB
- FCRG3062AS
- FCRG3062AW
- FCRG306LAF
- GCFG3059BF
The models have the serial number range of VF52200000 through VF54399999. Both numbers are printed on a nameplate located in the drawer beneath the oven.
The CPSC said consumers should stop using the recalled ranges immediately and contact Electrolux, which will provide in-home installation of a new bake burner for free. The agency said consumers can still use the cooktop burners on the range.
CHOCOLATE CANDY SOLD AT LIDL RECALLED OVER UNDECLARED HAZELNUT ALLERGEN

Frigidaire HVAC equipment in Sonoma County, Calif., May 5, 2024. (Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images)
Electrolux and the CPSC are aware of 62 reports of the oven’s bake burner delayed ignition, including 30 reports of burn injuries.
| Ticker | Security | Last | Change | Change % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LOW | LOWE’S COMPANIES INC. | 224.63 | -5.08 | -2.21% |
| HD | THE HOME DEPOT INC. | 320.75 | -7.46 | -2.27% |
The ranges were sold at Lowe’s, Home Depot and other retailers nationwide, as well as through Frigidaire’s website from June 2025 through January 2026 for between $630 and $2,700.
Business
High-protein trend strengthens dairy market

Cobank report highlights how rising protein demand is strengthening dairy markets and milk utilization.
Business
Gingrich says Europe must do its fair share amid US global conflict
Fox News contributor Newt Gingrich joins ‘Varney & Co.’ to weigh in on the timeline for ending the Iran conflict, rising tensions with European allies and the potential effect on oil prices and the upcoming midterm elections.
European tensions are resurfacing as questions grow over burden sharing in global conflicts, and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich argued long-standing imbalances between the U.S. and its allies are becoming harder to ignore.
Fox News contributor Newt Gingrich joined FOX Business’ Stuart Varney on “Varney & Co.” to discuss the widening divide between the United States and Europe as the conflict in the Middle East continues to test international alliances.
O’Leary Ventures Chairman Kevin O’Leary discusses the Iran War’s market impact, the collectibles market and more on ‘The Claman Countdown.’
Gingrich pointed to what he described as a fundamental disconnect in expectations, saying Europe has grown reliant on American leadership for decades.
“The fact that we protected Europe from having liberated it after World War II. We protected it all through the Cold War. We are still the primary protectors of Europe. They need to learn to do their fair share,” Gingrich said.
KEVIN O’LEARY FORECASTS GLOBAL POWER SHIFT IN STRAIT OF HORMUZ AS IRAN CONFLICT RATTLES OIL MARKETS
As pressure builds around key global shipping routes, including the Strait of Hormuz, Gingrich suggested the burden of maintaining stability continues to fall largely on the U.S.
Sen. Ashley Moody, R-Fla., joins ‘Mornings with Maria’ to weigh in on a potential $200 billion Iran defense package, rising Middle East tensions and a heated Senate clash over DHS leadership.
“It may take a substantial campaign, but I think in two or three weeks, if we focus on it, we can break the back of the Iranian effort to close the Strait,” Gingrich said.
He framed the issue as part of a broader philosophical divide, arguing that the U.S. is focused on innovation and forward momentum, while Europe leans more heavily on regulation.

Members of the U.S. military on a missile destroyer during Operation Epic Fury (U.S. Navy via Getty Images / Getty Images)
“We think you’re going to get to the future by innovation. They think you can hide from the future by regulation. It doesn’t work,” Gingrich said.
Despite calls for stronger allied coordination, Gingrich suggested Europe’s military limitations mean its role would likely remain secondary.
CHINESE MISSILES TARGETING US NAVY COULD TRIGGER ‘OVERNIGHT’ WAR SHIFT, EXPERT WARNS
“It would be nice if they would help a little bit. It would make people feel better if they would help a little bit,” he said.
U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright joins ‘Mornings with Maria’ to discuss rising oil prices, Iran’s attacks in the Gulf and how the U.S. could release Iranian oil to stabilize global markets.
Still, he emphasized that the outcome of ongoing conflicts will ultimately hinge on U.S. and allied strength, not symbolic contributions.
“In the end, it’s the American-Israeli coalition, which is gonna win this fight. … Having one ship from France or one ship from Britain is not a very big contribution. … The truth is, if you look at the British Navy right now, it is so underfunded, they can’t do very much. They just don’t have the capacity,” Gingrich concluded.
Business
How to build an effective employee phishing training program in 2026
You may not be able to stop every phishing email from reaching employee inboxes, but the right training program can dramatically improve your odds.
Phishing remains the primary entry point in cyber breaches, accounting for around 15% of incidents, according to one recent study. AI is one of the main drivers for this continued growth, allowing cybercriminals to write more realistic and personalized messages and distribute them en masse.
Technical measures like spam filters and DMARC email authentication protocols block many malicious messages, but phishing is ultimately a human issue. Security-conscious organizations are increasingly investing in employee phishing training, making it a key driver of stronger security culture and safer behaviour.
So what does it take to build an effective employee phishing training program in 2026?
Focus on behaviour change, not awareness
The ultimate goal of phishing training should not just be to raise awareness. The goal is to actually reduce security risk. Most people understand what phishing is, but that knowledge doesn’t necessarily translate into the right decisions when a convincing email hits their inboxes.
While helpful, completion rates or quiz scores should not be the main benchmark for how effective a phishing training program is. The focus must shift toward increasing reporting rates.
To improve outcomes, the type of training matters most. Presentation-style sessions are okay for building awareness, but building better habits requires employees to go through actual phishing simulations and realistic scenarios that mirror the attacks they may encounter in their daily work.
Conduct training continuously
The frequency of training is also a key factor. Phishing threats evolve constantly, so a training program that runs once a year will quickly become outdated. Organizations should instead adopt a continuous approach to phishing education.
Short, regular training modules and periodic phishing simulations help reinforce secure behaviour over time while keeping employees familiar with the latest phishing techniques. Such ongoing exposure helps build instinctive responses, such as pausing before clicking a link or verifying unusual requests.
Continuous training also allows organizations to gradually increase the realism and difficulty of phishing simulations. As employees improve, training can introduce more sophisticated scenarios that better reflect modern attacks.
Role-based and contextual training
Not all employees face the same phishing risks. While generic phishing campaigns do exist and are quite common, most successful attacks are personalized and tailored to the target’s role, responsibilities, or access within the organization.
Finance teams, for example, may encounter invoice scams, while HR may receive phishing emails disguised as job applications or employee document requests. Executives and senior leaders are frequent targets of spear-phishing and business email compromise (BEC) attacks that impersonate trusted partners or internal staff.
Modern training platforms are increasingly using AI to generate realistic phishing scenarios at scale. Organizations can create a variety of training emails that closely mimic real-world attacks, specific to different roles, departments, and risk profiles.
Strong reporting culture
In the majority of workplaces, reporting phishing attempts is often not something employees think about. Even if they detect a phish and rightfully disengage, they often just delete the email and move on without alerting the security team.
To fix that, reporting should be made as easy as possible, ideally through one-click reporting buttons integrated directly into the email client. A strong reporting culture also hinges on the way organizations respond when there are incidents. If employees fear being blamed or disciplined for clicking a malicious link, they may hesitate to report incidents, which can delay detection and response.
A good approach is to treat mistakes as learning opportunities, and for security teams to use those incidents to refine and adjust training materials by focusing on employee weak points.
Track effectiveness over time
It’s difficult to determine whether a phishing training program is working without metrics. Organizations should track key indicators such as phishing reporting rates, reporting speed, and click rates during phishing simulations.
These metrics provide valuable insight into how employees are responding to potential threats. If these metrics are getting better with time, it’s a good sign that the training program is heading in the right direction.
Tracking performance over time also helps identify repeat offenders or employees who may require additional guidance. The same can be applied to entire departments. Some departments may have significantly higher click rates during simulations, which is a solid indicator that improvements to the training material for that specific group are necessary.
Conclusion
Phishing will likely remain one of the main threats organizations have to deal with throughout 2026 and beyond. The human factor is the ultimate target for attackers, and it’s a critical defence organizations have to strengthen.
By building a phishing training program that focuses on realism and improving employee behaviour, organizations can turn the human factor into their strongest asset contributing to a resilient security culture.
Business
The 'Monetary Truman Show' Is Over: The Fed Is No Longer In Control
The 'Monetary Truman Show' Is Over: The Fed Is No Longer In Control
Business
Form S-1 Green Dot Corp For: 20 March

Form S-1 Green Dot Corp For: 20 March
Business
Price, availability… Does a new gas crisis await Europe?
Iranian attacks on Qatar’s Ras Laffan LNG hub have caused natural gas prices to surge, though Europe’s impact is expected to be less severe due to reduced reliance on Qatari LNG. While wholesale prices have jumped, they remain significantly lower than during the Ukraine conflict, with storage levels below average for the upcoming winter.
Business
Hyundai recalls Palisade SUVs over power seat defect
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Hyundai Motor Company is recalling more than 61,000 Palisade SUVs in the U.S. after an issue with powered seats was linked to the death of a child, federal regulators said.
The recall affects model year 2026 Palisade and Palisade Hybrid vehicles equipped with the Limited and Calligraphy trim packages, the automaker said in a recall report filed with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
“The 2nd and 3rd row power seat assemblies equipped in the subject vehicles may not respond to contact with an occupant or object as intended during activation of certain powered seat functions, including the automatic power-folding (stow) function and the ‘one-touch’ tilt-and-slide (walk-in) feature of the 2nd row power seat assembly,” the report said.
HYUNDAI STOPS SALES OF CERTAIN SUVS AFTER 2-YEAR-OLD GIRL’S DEATH

The 2026 Hyundai Palisade SUV during the New York International Auto Show Press Preview in New York City April 16, 2025. (Shannon Stapleton/Reuters)
The announcement comes after a young child died in an incident involving a Palisade that is still under investigation, according to the automaker.
Reuters reported the victim was a 2-year-old girl from Ohio who was killed March 7.
“Hyundai is aware of a tragic incident involving a Palisade,” the company said in a press release March 13. “While Hyundai does not yet have the full details and the incident is still under investigation, a young child lost her life. Hyundai extends its deepest sympathies to her family.”
TOYOTA RECALLS 550,000 VEHICLES OVER SEAT DEFECT

A view from the interior of a Hyundai Palisade showing the gray leather upholstery of the second-row power-folding seats. (Hyundai USA)
The South Korean automaker said last week it is pausing sales of the Palisades with the Limited and Calligraphy trim packages following the incident.
Hyundai said in the recall notice it received four reports of minor injuries related to second-row seat operation.

Hyundai issued a stop-sale and plans for a recall for 2026 Palisade Limited and Calligraphy models March 13, 2026. (Hyundai USA)
FORD RECALLS MORE THAN 83,000 VEHICLES OVER HEADLIGHT, ENGINE VALVE ISSUES
A recall remedy is under development. Until it becomes available, the automaker warned owners of the affected vehicles to use caution when operating the second- and third-row power-folding seat functions.
Hyundai also said owners should “avoid contacting the ‘one-touch’ tilt-and-slide button located on the 2nd row setback … during entry and exit of the 3rd row and take measures to prevent inadvertent activation of this feature.”
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FOX Business’ Ashley Carnahan contributed to this report.
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