Kremlin envoy proposes ‘Putin-Trump tunnel’ to link Russia and U.S.
Reuters
An investment envoy for Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday entreated Elon Musk and his tunneling business, the Boring Company, to commit to building an undersea rail tunnel through the Bering Strait to be partly funded by Moscow.
Kirill Dmitriev, who is head of Russia’s sovereign wealth fund, said in posts on Musk’s social media platform X that he envisioned “the Putin-Trump Tunnel – a 70-mile link symbolizing unity.”
A tunnel like this would traditionally cost an estimated $65 billion to build, Dmitriev said, adding that The Boring Company and its technology could potentially reduce those costs to $8 billion and complete the project within eight years.
“Let’s build a future together!” he wrote.
Dmitriev’s suggestion followed a call between Putin and President Donald Trump on Thursday, during which plans were made to discuss possible resolutions to the Ukraine War.
Trump said Secretary of State Marco Rubio and other high-level advisors will meet next week with a Russian delegation before Trump and Putin meet in Budapest, Hungary, at a future date.
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Musk did not respond to a request for comment about the proposal.
Construction of an undersea tunnel in the Bering Strait would require Musk’s Boring Company to work through below-freezing temperatures in a region without existing infrastructure and with deep and frequent earthquakes.
The Boring Company has no track record of working through such conditions.
Its previous tunneling efforts were completed in hot, dry locations with plenty of infrastructure and services nearby.
The Boring Company was recently fined and cited by environmental regulators in the state of Nevada for an “extraordinary number of violations,” ProPublica reported, citing public records. Those violations included: digging without approval, releasing untreated water onto city streets and spilling waste from trucks.
The Boring Company is now working on a 10-mile tunnel project from downtown Nashville, Tennessee, to its airport, dubbed the Music City Loop. Residents protested, in part, due to the lack of planning before The Boring Company project was authorized in the flood-prone city.
U.S. President Donald Trump (R) walks with Russian President Vladimir Putin as they arrives at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson on August 15, 2025 in Anchorage, Alaska.
Andrew Harnik | Getty Images
Musk’s automaker, Tesla, has supply chain ties to Russia, and the CEO has spoken with Putin about other matters in the past few years.
The EV maker has purchased millions of euros worth of aluminum from Rusal, a company founded by sanctioned Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska, CNBC previously reported.
Musk held secret talks with Putin in 2022, the Wall Street Journal reported in October 2024.
In one instance, Putin had pressured Musk to direct SpaceX to withold Starlink, its satellite internet communications service, from Taiwan as a favor to Chinese President Xi Jinping, the Journal reported, citing two people briefed on the request.
Beijing is a critical ally to the Kremlin.
The conversations between Musk and Putin, who once ran the KGB, reportedly occurred as Musk was in the midst of a leveraged buyout and takeover of Twitter, now known as X.
Working with NASA, Musk’s aerospace and defense contractor, SpaceX, has also launched Russian cosmonauts to the International Space Station.
Elon Musk, during a news conference with President Donald Trump, inside the Oval Office at the White House in Washington on May 30, 2025.
Tom Brenner | The Washington Post | Getty Images
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Here are five key things investors need to know to start the trading day:
1. Flat tire
All eyes were on Tesla yesterday, when the electric vehicle maker became the first Magnificent Seven company to report earnings for the new season. Investors weren’t impressed: Though quarterly revenue was higher than a year ago, snapping two down quarters, earnings per share came in below Wall Street’s expectations amid rising capital expenditures.
Here’s what happened on the earnings call:
CEO Elon Musk and other executives offered little forward guidance or insight into the auto business. Instead, the focus was on Tesla’s work in Robotaxis and Optimus humanoid robots, CNBC’s Lora Kolodny reports.
Heading into the report, a group of unions and watchdogs launched the “Take Back Tesla” campaign to urge investors to oppose Musk’s new compensation plan. The highly publicized pay package would give the billionaire entrepreneur an opportunity to rake in almost $1 trillion in stock.
Musk addressed the pay plan at the end of the earnings call, calling proxy advisors who oppose the package “corporate terrorists.”
“If we build this robot army, do I have at least a strong influence over that robot army?” Musk said on the call. “I don’t feel comfortable building that robot army if I don’t have at least a strong influence.”
A Southwest aircraft takes off as an American Airlines Boeing 737-823 is seen at gate at Washington National Airport (DCA) in Arlington, V, on July 21, 2025.
Daniel Slim | AFP | Getty Images
On the other hand, Southwest Airlinesbeat expectations on both lines. Of note: The Dallas-based carrier posted a profit for earnings per share, while the Street had penciled in a loss. Still, shares are more than 1% lower before the bell this morning.
American Airlines also reported better earnings than analysts forecasted and gave an upbeat outlook for the remainder of the year. Shares rose nearly 4% following the release.
Next up on airline investors’ agendas: Alaska earnings due after the bell today.
3. Putin’s punishment
Oil storage tanks stand at the RN-Tuapsinsky refinery, operated by Rosneft Oil Co., in Tuapse, Russia. Oil prices were mixed on Monday as investors balanced expectations the OPEC will cut output to support prices against concerns sparked by Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell saying the United States will face slow growth “for some time.”
Andrey Rudakov | Bloomberg | Getty Images
The White House yesterday placed more sanctions on Rosneft and Lukoil — Russia’s two largest crude oil companies. Oil prices surged as a result, with the global benchmark Brent jumping more than 5%.
The Treasury Department cited Russia’s “lack of serious commitment to a peace process to end the war in Ukraine.” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent warned that the Treasury could take “further action if necessary.”
These sanctions are related to plans for a meeting between President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin falling through, a senior White House official told NBC News.
4. AI layoffs
Dado Ruvic | Reuters
While many tech companies race to hire AI talent, Meta appeared to take the opposite approach yesterday.
The Facebook parent is cutting around 600 roles from its AI business, which people familiar with the matter described to CNBC as bloated. No one from TBD Labs — the division that includes many of Meta’s major AI hires this summer — is on the chopping block, the people said.
Meanwhile, several big names in technology are calling for a pause on one form of AI development called “Superintelligence.” As CNBC’s Dylan Butts notes, the buzzy term refers to a hypothetical form of AI that would essentially outperform humans on basically everything. Signatories of the statement calling for a pause included Virgin Group founder Richard Branson and Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak.
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5. Percolators and picket lines
Barista Andy Acevado prepares a drink inside a Starbucks Corp. coffee shop in New York.
Victor J. Blue | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Breaking news this morning: The Starbucks Workers United union will start voting tomorrow on whether to authorize a strike. The group also said it will also organize rallies and pickets across the country with member baristas and their allies.
The union and Starbucks are not currently in negotiations over a contract after talks broke down late last year, CNBC’s Kate Rogers reports. The union said it wants higher pay, improved hours and resolutions on outstanding labor disputes. A Starbucks spokesperson told CNBC that the union “chose to walk away from the bargaining table. If they’re ready to come back, we’re ready to talk.”
Starbucks is slated to report earnings next week.
The Daily Dividend
— CNBC’s Lora Kolodny, Leslie Josephs, Dan Mangan, Kif Leswing, Ashley Capoot, Dylan Butts, Kate Rogers and Courtney Reagancontributed to this report. Josephine Rozzelle edited this edition.
Alibaba announced plans to release a pair of smart glasses powered by its AI models. The Quark AI Glasses are Alibaba’s first foray into the smart glasses product category.
Alibaba
Alibaba on Thursday announced pricing for its upcoming artificial intelligence glasses and launched a new chatbot powered by its latest AI models.
The Chinese technology giant said the Quark AI Glasses will go on pre-sale on Oct. 24 on Alibaba’s e-commerce platform Tmall. The pre-sale price will start at 4,699 Chinese yuan ($659.4) but after applying various discounts, will cost 3,999 yuan.
Alibaba will begin shipping the product from December.
The Hangzhou-headquartered firm also unveiled AI Chat Assistant, a new chatbot mode within its existing Quark app.
The latest moves are part of Alibaba’s aggressive AI push this year which has seen the company release updated models and a drive to reinvigorate sales at its cloud computing business through which it sells much of this technology to businesses.
But the glasses and chatbot product highlight an increasing area of focus for Alibaba — AI that is aimed at consumers.
Alibaba’s shares closed nearly 1.7% higher in Hong Kong and its U.S.-listed stock also rose in premarket trade.
Alibaba AI glasses
Alibaba first announced the Quark AI Glasses in July. It’s the first product of its kind from the Chinese giant and the eyewear is powered by the company’s Qwen large language model and its Quark AI assistant.
The glasses support functions such as hands-free calling, music streaming and real-time language translation.
Many tech companies see wearables, specifically glasses, as the next frontier in computing, alongside the smartphone. The Quark AI Glasses are Alibaba’s answer to Meta’s smart glasses that were designed in collaboration with Ray-Ban.
The Chinese tech giant will also now compete with Chinese consumer electronics player Xiaomi who this year released its own AI glasses.
New AI assistant
Quark is Alibaba’s main consumer-facing AI app. Alibaba on Thursday unveiled a product called AI Chat Assistant, which is a new AI chatbot powered by its latest Qwen3 models.
The new mode allows users to switch to a chatbot style interface and have conversations via text or voice. Alibaba said the new feature allows “AI search and conversation” in one interface. The idea is that users can do everything they need in one application.
Alibaba said some of the functions include photo editing, “photo-based problem solving” and AI writing.
The product is Alibaba’s answer to the growing number of chatbot products out there from OpenAI’s ChatGPT to DeepSeek.
The world of enterprise AI is dominated by U.S. names from Microsoft to Salesforce, but Europe has a major player that is pushing hard into the space: SAP.
In an exclusive interview with CNBC’s “Europe Early Edition,” SAP CEO Christian Klein said that AI is “the number one reason” why customers are signing deals with the firm.
“After we close Q4, actually, 80, 85% of our revenue for next year is already done. So, [a] good pipeline for Q4 and with that, when we close out the year, our customers, also our investors, can expect there’s also very positive output,” he said.
SAP’s cloud backlog rose 23% in the third quarter to 18.8 billion, the company said in an earnings statement published late on Wednesday.
“I was pretty optimistic last night, and I’m still optimistic as the pipeline looks good,” Klein said. “We actually now have our biggest quarter.”
Revenue rose 7% to 9.08 billion euros ($10.53 billion), slightly below expectations of 9.15 billion euros, according to consensus figures compiled by LSEG. However, it saw gains of 22% in its cloud revenue, with Klein citing increasing AI and data cloud market share as the reason for the revenue jump.
Deutsche Bank said the firm remains a “top pick” in the European tech and global software sector, however it noted that SAP is now guiding toward the lower-end of its forecast for cloud revenue of 21.6 billion euros to 21.9 billions euros this year.
“Against an environment of lengthening deal cycles and pushouts … SAP continues to execute very well, in our view, even if delays in deal closings have led the company to guide to the lower end of its Cloud revenue growth range for FY25,” Deutsche Bank analysts said in a note led by Johannes Schaller.
SAP’s shares were initially 2% higher at the start of the trading session on Thursday, but later pared gains to trade 2.5% lower. The stock is down 3% year-to-date.
Europe’s AI playbook
SAP briefly became Europe’s most valuable company in March, riding the tailwinds of enthusiasm and gains in the German stock market.
The European Union has faced criticism for its legislative approach to AI, with some businesses calling for deregulation in efforts to catch up in the global AI race. Klein said he’s not sure if the bloc is adopting the right strategy compared with the U.S. approach of, “give me your AI, let’s test it, let’s refine it, let’s optimize it over time.”
The chief executive said he is laser-focused on creating value, explaining that it is “100%” what customers are looking for. It echoes the message of other AI firms and investors in Europe, given that the U.S. and China currently dominate the training of large language models, which is the infrastructure needed for AI. However, the general sentiment is that Europe has a chance to be a leader in putting it to use.
The training large language models is now a “commodity,” Klein said, adding that he expects the application of AI will become an increasing priority for businesses and SAP’s bet on this will be reflected in its share price in the future.
“It’s super important that we are not only selling into a hype, but that we see real adoption,” Klein said.
SAP has some exposure to China through partnerships that allow it to work “in China, for China,” due to geopolitical tensions, Klein noted. The country’s speed of AI development, low regulation and talent pool makes it hard to ignore, he said.
The company offers cloud solutions, expenses, and supply chain management and analytics to corporates. It underwent a large restructure in 2024 and pivoted towards AI services, which is now being used across the likes of finance and supplier sourcing.