Also: BoA earnings, Microsoft A.I., China's COVID toll. Good morning.
I was traveling in Asia last week, and as a result had to miss one of the year’s big events: Fortune Brainstorm Tech, held for the first time in Park City, Utah. I asked Fortune editor-at-large Michal Lev-Ram, who hosted the event, to share her thoughts:
Our program featured speakers like Eugenia Kuyda, a founder who is using A.I. to combat loneliness (think chatbot “companions” who are always there for you), climate tech investor (and former Vice President) Al Gore, and Bryan Johnson, an entrepreneur who is trying to crack the longevity code (hint: he eats 70 pounds of veggies a month and takes 61 pills per day). We also heard from the CEOs of tech companies like Anthropic, Atlassian, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Twilio, Ancestry, and many more.
These timely discussions, coupled with our outdoor activities, breakout sessions, and other opportunities to mingle, provided the perfect backdrop for Brainstorm Tech, which was created as a conversation and a community, not just an event, back in 2001.
To be sure, we also delved into the state of Utah: Our opening session featured four tech leaders who are rooted in the Beehive State, and they had plenty to share about the emerging hub.
“I think one of the things that’s made Utah so great during this time is the fact that it wasn’t the Bay Area, we didn’t have access to the capital, we didn’t have access to a lot of the influential pioneers in tech,” Aaron Skonnard, the CEO of Utah-based Pluralsight, told the audience. “So we kind of had to find it ourselves…I think that has made Utah just a really strong community of entrepreneurs.”
There was another new tech hub front and center at this year’s Brainstorm Tech. Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, who is also a Republican presidential hopeful, took the stage to make the case for his hometown: “We’ve grown our venture capital pipeline by about 500%,” Mayor Suarez told the audience, adding that it takes time to become an epicenter for capital.
Luckily, as was evidenced by the abundance of A.I. conversations at Tech, there is no one region that can contain the explosion of interest and investment in the burgeoning technology—even one as majestic as Utah.
For more from this year’s Brainstorm Tech, please listen to a special episode of our Leadership Next podcast, available on Apple or Spotify. Or read more here.
Alan Murray @alansmurray alan.murray@fortune.com
|
|
|
Bank of America earnings
High interest rates are bolstering Bank of America’s bottom line as the nation’s second-largest bank gets larger loan repayments from customers. The bank reported $7.4 billion in net income last quarter, a 19% year-on-year increase. Bank of America’s investment bank division also posted a surprise 76% jump in income. Reuters
Microsoft A.I.
Users of Microsoft’s Office suite will soon need to pay an extra $30 a month if they want to access new A.I.-powered features, the tech giant announced Tuesday. The company also previewed a confidential version of its Bing chatbot that will better protect private information from corporate clients. The news sent Microsoft’s shares up almost 4% to close at a record high. Bloomberg
China’s COVID toll
China’s wealthy Zhejiang province reported a 73% year-on-year jump in cremations in the first quarter of the year in data published before the weekend. The data gives an indication of the true scale of China’s massive COVID outbreak at the beginning of the year. By Monday, Zhejiang’s government had yanked the stat from the internet after it drew social media attention. Financial Times
|
|
|
Evolving board equity and representation According to a recent report from Deloitte and the Alliance for Board Diversity, 22% of Fortune 500 board seats were held by individuals from underrepresented racial and ethnic groups, up from 17.5% in 2020. While this shows improvement, the level of representation in the Fortune 500 lags the Fortune 100. Explore additional key findings from the Missing Pieces Report here.
|
| |
Thanks for reading. If you liked this email, pay it forward. Share it with someone you know. Did someone share this with you? Sign up here. For previous editions, click here. To view all of Fortune's newsletters on the latest in business, go here.
|
|
| | |
|