š Singaporeās next leader

Good morning, Quartz readers!
Hereās what you need to know
Singaporeās prime minister is stepping down before the countryās 2025 election. Lee Hsien Loong will bow outāa plan that was in the works before the covid pandemic shelved itāand hand the job over to his deputy Lawrence Wong late next year.
Elon Musk has a chatbot. Its name is Grok, itās inspired by The Hitchhikerās Guide to the Galaxy, and itās being billed as a competitor to OpenAIās ChatGPT that will eventually be available to paying X users.
OpenAI is having its first developerās conference today. Software engineers and entrepreneurs are gathering in San Francisco for the ChatGPT makerās Silicon Valley rite of passage.
Maersk is cutting another 3,500 jobs. That brings the total layoffs from the global shipping giant to 10,000 roles this year as it faces plummeting profits.
How legendary investors caught the interest rate break
Rising rates are no good for bond traders. Each time the US Federal Reserve hikes its benchmark rate, older bonds with lower rates become less valuable, forcing arbitrageurs to search for higher yields. But the Fedās Nov. 1 decision to hold interest rates steady, along with the latest economic data, have some loud-mouthed investors, like Bill Ackman and Bill Gross, talking.
First, Gross, the āBond King,ā said he thought the yield curve would go positive by the end of the yearāthat yields on short-term debt would finally fall below those for long-term debt after 14 months of inversion. Then Ackman, a hedge fund manager known for his boardroom activism, said that he had covered his long-term bond shortāthat is, he stopped betting that the price of the debt would fall.
Lo and behold, it appears they are rightāfor now.

Quotable: Billionaires wonāt drop the recession narrative
āI am not predicting something worse than 2008. Itās just naive not to be open-minded to something really, really bad happening.ā āDuquesne Family Office founder Stanley Druckenmiller to investors at the 2023 Sohn Investment Conference on Oct. 31
With mixed signals from the US economy, and the Federal Reserve in a wait-and-see mode, Americaās billionaires are decidedly more panicked. It makes one ponder if there is something they know that other investors donāt. Not everyone is buying that though, and some think what the richest people in the US are really saying is, ādonāt break our business models.ā
The 10 US companies emitting the most carbon
Out of the 6 billion metric tons of CO2 that were emitted in the US in 2020, over half a billion metric tons of those emissions came from facilities owned by just 10 companies.

Many of these firms supply electricity for utilities, including Vistra Energy, Duke Energy, Southern Company, and Berkshire Hathaway. But thatās not all they have in common: most also donāt hold up well when it comes to environmental justice.
Quartzās most popular
š¤ Jeff Bezos is moving from Amazonās birthplace to Miamiās āBillionaire Bunkerā
šø Walgreens staff is paying the price for the companyās financial health struggles
š¼ How to lengthen the stay of boomers at retirement age
šø The Beatles new song āNow and Thenā used AI to lift out John Lennonās voice
š A huge quarter for Ozempic and Wegovy maker Novo Nordisk is masking a longer-term challenge
ā Starbucks is slowly but surely climbing out of its sales slump in China
Surprising discoveries
A sheep stranded for two years on a remote Scottish beach was rescued. Fiona isnāt Britainās loneliest sheep anymore.
A new hydrogel could change how human tissue is grown in labs. The self-healing and antimicrobial material could be used in medical procedures.
If youāve ever wondered what our Sunās birth looked like, the James Webb telescope has a new photo for you. It involves some brilliant pinky-red jets.
Rats may have an imagination. Weāll wait for that live action Ratatouille.
California has an invasive fruit fly problem. Itās dumping millions of sterile male flies on Los Angeles to stop the population from growing.
Our best wishes for a productive day. Send any news, comments, happy sheep, and imaginative rats to [email protected]. Todayās Daily Brief was brought to you by Morgan Haefner.