Skip to content
Trending
June 18, 2025The Fed is likely to keep rates the same but give a forecast that moves markets. What to expect August 23, 2025This under-the-radar ETF trend may be flashing a warning signal for the market May 10, 2025Coinbase shares fall after first-quarter revenue misses Wall Street estimates July 17, 2025Kevin Warsh touts ‘regime change’ at Fed and calls for partnership with Treasury August 25, 2025From the ‘Big Stay’ to a ‘no-hire, no-fire’ freeze, labor markets are seeing sizable shifts June 20, 2025CEO recession expectations decline from April scare, survey says October 14, 2025Our patience in BlackRock pays off as its earnings send the stock to record highs July 21, 2025Treasury Secretary Bessent calls for a review of ‘the entire’ Federal Reserve March 2, 2025How a $5 million fix turned Paramount Pictures’ ‘Sonic’ into a billion-dollar franchise December 3, 2025Buyer beware? Increasingly complex ETFs may burn investors due to market backdrop
  Sunday 7 December 2025
everydayread.net
  • HOME
  • Bitcoin
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
everydayread.net
everydayread.net
  • HOME
  • Bitcoin
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
everydayread.net
  Economy  CEOs of Wells Fargo and Pfizer caution the U.S. could lose its edge to China without innovation
Economy

CEOs of Wells Fargo and Pfizer caution the U.S. could lose its edge to China without innovation

AdminAdmin—October 19, 20250

Albert Bourla, CEO of Pfizer, Charlie Scharf, Wells Fargo & Company CEO and Kathy Warden, Northrop Grumman Chair & CEO speak during the Invest in America Forum on Oct. 15, 2025.

Aaron Clamage | CNBC

Wells Fargo CEO Charlie Scharf and Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla sounded the alarm Wednesday over the potential for the the U.S. to lose its competitive edge to China, but said artificial intelligence could help America maintain its lead.

Speaking at CNBC’s inaugural Invest in America Forum in Washington, D.C., the two executives said that while the U.S. still leads in many sectors, inconsistent policy and underinvestment is ceding ground to China. AI, they said, poses both risks and benefits for the U.S. economy.

Scharf said AI will likely reduce the size of workforces — but will boost productivity.

“We will likely have less people, absolutely,” Scharf said. “When we look at the tools that we’ve implemented just for people that are coding, you see 20%, 30%, 40% improvement in coders. We haven’t reduced our head count by 20%, 30% or 40%. We’re actually doing more than we otherwise would have been able to do.”

More stories

Here are the five key takeaways from Friday’s consumer price index report

October 24, 2025

From tariffs to DOGE, what companies are saying about the impact of MAGA policies

February 18, 2025

With June jobs report looming, DOGE government layoffs could start becoming a factor

July 6, 2025

U.S. economy shrank 0.3% in the first quarter as Trump policy uncertainty weighed on businesses

May 1, 2025

Wells Fargo big bank peers like JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs are already hiring fewer people because of AI advancements.

Scharf also said the financial sector is poised for major regulatory changes despite an ongoing political stalemate in Washington.

“We ultimately do expect significant changes in capital requirements, liquidity requirements,” he said. “We do expect to see changes which will allow people in the industry, not just big banks and medium-sized banks, but smaller banks as well, to do more in these [local] communities.”

Bourla, meanwhile, expressed concern about China’s growing strength in biotechnology and pharmaceuticals, pointing to a surge in research and development spending, regulatory reforms and a national strategy focused on life sciences.

“They [China] filed more patents this year than the U.S.,” Bourla said. “That’s never happened in history. Five years ago, the split was 90%-10%. … The gap is closing, but they probably will become [better than us] unless we get our act together.”

Bourla urged the U.S. to shift focus from trying to slow China’s progress toward improving its own productivity and innovation.

“We spend more time trying to think about how to slow down China rather than think how we can become better than them,” Bourla said. “We need to have regulatory changes here. We need to have stability. Tariffs and pricing was not helping.”

Pfizer recently agreed to a drug pricing deal with the Trump administration as part of a broader effort to remove long-standing uncertainties around pricing, Medicaid reimbursements and distribution. As part of the agreement, Pfizer secured a three-year exemption from pharmaceutical-specific tariffs, contingent on additional investments in U.S. manufacturing. 

“Tariffs and the uncertainty of drastic correction of U.S. pricing — with this deal, we are removing both uncertainties,” Bourla said Wednesday.

He also called artificial intelligence the next frontier for medicine, predicting that AI will revolutionize drug discovery by dramatically accelerating timelines for finding treatments for diseases like Alzheimer’s and cancer.

“We tried for years to find cures … AI will make it happen,” Bourla said.

America, Inc.
United Airlines’ summer earnings and profit outlook top estimates, but revenue falls short
Moody’s says the banking system, private credit markets are sound despite worries over bad loans
Related posts
  • Related posts
  • More from author
Economy

Ukraine, trade, pandas: What China’s Xi and France’s Macron discussed in Beijing

December 6, 20250
Economy

Core inflation rate watched by Fed hit 2.8%, delayed September data shows, lower than expected

December 5, 20250
Economy

Layoff announcements top 1.1 million this year, the most since 2020 pandemic, Challenger says

December 4, 20250
Load more
Read also
Finance

London’s answer to Wall Street gains momentum as major firms sign on

December 6, 20250
Economy

Ukraine, trade, pandas: What China’s Xi and France’s Macron discussed in Beijing

December 6, 20250
Earnings

Week in review: Stocks rise, Meta gets real on metaverse, and Salesforce bounces

December 6, 20250
Business

From the California gold rush to Sydney Sweeney: How denim became the most enduring garment in American fashion

December 6, 20250
Finance

Is bitcoin really digital gold? In 2025, the leading crypto has failed to answer that question

December 5, 20250
Economy

Core inflation rate watched by Fed hit 2.8%, delayed September data shows, lower than expected

December 5, 20250
Load more
    © 2022, All Rights Reserved.
    • About Us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Cookie Law
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions