On Wednesday, DealBook will be live and in person at our annual summit in New York.
Andrew takes the stage around 9 a.m. Eastern, and the first conversation will start soon after. The DealBook team and reporters from The Times will be reporting live from the conference.
Even if you are not with us, you can follow along here beginning around 8:30 a.m. Eastern.
Here are the speakers in order of appearance (the conversations that will be livestreamed on NYTimes.com are noted in parentheses):
Ken Griffin, the founder and C.E.O. of Citadel
Sam Altman, the co-founder and C.E.O. of OpenAI (livestream)
Serena Williams, the 23-time Grand Slam tennis champion and managing partner of Serena Ventures
Bill Clinton, the 42nd President of the United States and author of “Citizen: My Life After the White House”
Jerome Powell, the Chair of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (livestream)
Alex Cooper, the host of the “Call Her Daddy” podcast and founder of the Unwell Network
David Ricks, the chair and C.E.O. of Eli Lilly, and Fatima Cody Stanford, obesity medicine physician at Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School
Prince Harry, The Duke of Sussex, the co-founder of the Archewell Foundation and chief impact officer of BetterUp
Sundar Pichai, the C.E.O. of Google
Jeff Bezos, the founder and executive chairman of Amazon, and the founder of Blue Origin (livestream)
What to watch: The buzz, fears and questions around artificial intelligence, and the billions of dollars pouring into its advancement; the future of politics, media and political fund-raising; new weight-loss drugs and their potential impact across industries; trade wars; China-U.S. relations; interest rates; private spaceflight; and the evolution of the labor movement — these topics and more will be covered by Andrew as he talks with some of the biggest newsmakers in business, politics and culture.
There will be plenty of questions about an uncertain world. President-elect Trump has promised to disrupt the status quo in every corner of government. What will this mean for the independence of political institutions? What’s in store for global trade alliances in a world that embraces more protectionist policies? How will these shifts affect business, the economy and the markets? What does this reveal about who stands to gain on Wall Street, in Washington, and in Hollywood?
Looking elsewhere, what guardrails, if any, should be placed around powerful A.I. technologies? What do new attacks on corporate D.E.I. programs mean for chief executives and their corporate policies?
(More on what to expect below.)
ImageHERE’S WHAT’S HAPPENINGSouth Korea’s opposition moves to impeach the president as a deepening political crisis roils stocks and the currency. Lawmakers in Asia’s fourth-largest economy on Wednesday submitted a motion to oust President Yoon Suk Yeol after he briefly imposed martial law, setting off widespread street protests and spooking investors. Shares of Samsung, Hyundai and national banks fell sharply, as did the South Korean won, but recovered after the finance ministry, central bank and regulatory agencies pledged “unlimited” support to stabilize the foreign exchange market. An impeachment vote could come as early as Friday.
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